MonaVie Scam Exposed!

[Editor’s Note: MonaVie has threatened legal action against me twice in an attempt to prevent you from reading this article below. Since I’m within my legal rights to criticize the company they’ve turned to gaming Google to push this article down the search results – an attempt to prevent you from getting the information you need to make an informed decision about the company. This article has been completely updated (as of June 2012) from the ground up to reflect much of the information found from the huge discussion (6000+ comments) that you’ll find following the article. The original article about my introduction to MonaVie is preserved here. Reading 6000 comments may not be practical, so I’ve put some of the most important information at the Juice Scam website. However, due to time constraints, even that doesn’t have the information in these comments.]

Is MonaVie a Scam?

Is MonaVie a Scam?

The short answer is yes. The longer answer? It is perhaps the most incredible example of deceptive marketing in the history of mankind.

What I’ve found is tons of irrefutable evidence supported by reputable third parties that MonaVie is a grossly overpriced product, with little nutritional value, wrapped in a poor business opportunity that appears to be illegal pyramid scheme, supported by nonsensical “scientific” studies and illegal medical claims.

That’s a lot to digest. I’m going to give you a minute to re-read that.

Typically when people are interested in MonaVie, they are focused on two things: 1) The nutritional value of the product and 2) the business opportunity. After all, the promise of MonaVie marketing is health and wealth for you and all your friends.

MonaVie’s Nutritional Value

Many of MonaVie’s claims come on something called a ORAC value. It’s a lab test that measures anti-oxidants in food. On the face of it higher ORAC seems better, but there’s a lot more to it than that. I’m not a doctor, so I’m not going to try to explain ORAC to you. However, Dr. Jonny Bowden explains that MonaVie doesn’t cure cancer and gives great detail about ORAC in the process.

Many distributors make the claim that drinking 4 ounces of MonaVie is like eating 13 fruits and thus is a way to save money. This is a huge lie. MonaVie put out marketing material that said it “Delivers the antioxidant capacity of approximately 13 servings of fruits and vegetables in just four ounces.” MonaVie set up a the classic telephone game where the initial message conveyed changes as it passes through the downline and the words, “antioxidant capacity” get left out. In this statement, the antioxidant capacity is measured ORAC value, and the equivalent fruits and vegetables are not even mentioned. A MonaVie product specialist cleared this up when called, but MonaVie didn’t issue a clarification or change its website for years… see more at Drinking MonaVie is Not Equal to Eating 13 Fruits.

To follow up on the above, a single apple has the antioxidant capacity of 9.5 ounces of MonaVie. If a person was relying on four ounces of MonaVie to give them the equivalent of 13 fruits, they are making a huge nutritional error as 13 apples has the equivalent ORAC value as 123 ounces of MonaVie. MonaVie Original retails for around $1.48 an ounce, so that’s around $182 of juice for the equivalent antioxidant capacity of 13 apples.

A consortium of U.S. government agencies such as the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), USDA, and the FDA to put out guidelines on fruit and veggies and serving size. The result is that 4 ounces of MonaVie is a Serving of fruit which looks like 1 snack container of applesauce (4oz) or about 6 baby carrots. At MonaVie’s retail price of around $6.00 for four ounces that’s like buying a baby carrot for $1.00!

If you need a little more evidence on the nutritional value of MonaVie, Men’s Journal put several fruit juices to the test using criteria set up by a director or clinical nutrition. The result was horrendous, “MonaVie tested extremely low in anthocyanins and phenolics. Even apple juice (which also tested poorly) has more phenolics…” and “Plus, MonaVie’s vitamin C level was five times lower than that of Welch’s Grape Juice. That’s not many nutrients, especially at $1.20 a serving.” Website changes have divided the article into many pieces, but the you can read it in two parts: part 1 and part 2 with the MonaVie-specific comments.

The suit also uncovered an internal MonaVie memo by Ralph Carson, the company’s chief science officer, who created the original juice. The memo was in response to raised eyebrows about claims being made about the juice. Carson cautioned that the drink was “expensive flavored water. Any claims made are purely hypothetical, unsubstantiated and, quite frankly, bogus.”

Those claims that he’s referring to are the illegal health claims that we’ll get to in a bit.

Juice in general is not healthy

Another aspect to consider is that juice itself is shown not to be healthy. For years we thought it was healthy, but that thinking has changed and many view soda and juice as being the same. The HBO documentary Weight of a Nation clearly spells this out.

Here are some key quotes from that video: “Soda and other sugary drinks… is the only individual food that is directly related to obesity”, “There is nothing in a soft drink that is good for you. A Twinkie or a potato chip or a candy bar has at least a little nutrition. These sugared beverages have none at all”, and “Juice is just like soda… there is no difference. When you take fruit and you squeeze it, you throw the fiber in the garbage. That was the good part of the fruit. The juice is nature’s way of getting you to eat your fiber.”

When we take the statements above together, juice the same as soda, soda having less nutrition than a potato chip, it is clear that MonaVie can’t be nutritious. The processing has stripped out the fiber… the good part of the fruit. Some may argue that MonaVie is only four ounces a day and it’s not going to contribute to obesity. Well that 120 calories a day does add up… in a year it is 12.5 pounds (43,800 yearly calories divided by 3,500 calories in a pound).

(To prevent MonaVie distributors claiming that HBO doesn’t know anything about health, Weight of a Nation was done with “the Institute of Medicine (IOM), in association with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH).”)

As you can tell from the label above, MonaVie doesn’t have much of the fiber that comes from fruit naturally. Recently MonaVie started to add “fake” fiber (Fibersol-2 / Maltodextrin), so consumers looking at the nutritional label could be easily tricked into thinking that they are getting the good part of the fruit.

Need another source? Here is the New York Times article by three professors of pediatrics who explain “Juice is Not Healthy”.

MonaVie’s Specialized Health Drinks

MonaVie adds a special ingredient or two to its basic juice to create a juice for a specific purpose. The above illustrated the minimal value of the juice alone. Let’s look at a few versions:

MonaVie Active – This MonaVie juice’s star ingredients is glucosamine. In four ounces of MonaVie Active there are 1500mg of glucosamine. On Amazon.com, I found that you can get 375 tablets of Kirkland Glucosamine HCI for a price of $22.55 (as of 6/8/2012). It takes two tablets to equal the 1500mg of glucosamine in MonaVie Active, which comes out to 12 cents a day.

For a year, the Kirkland glucosamine will cost you $43.80. For a year of MonaVie Active (4 ounces * 365 days = 1460 ounces is about 58 and half bottles (25 ounces per bottle). At the retail price of $45 a bottle, 58 bottles costs $2,610 a year. You can save some money by buying MonaVie Active in bulk, but you’ll never get the price under $1000, especially with shipping. You’ll save at least a thousand dollars, perhaps two thousand by going with the equivalent cheap solution from Amazon or your local drug store.

MonaVie Pulse – This MonaVie juice’s star ingredients are plant sterols and resveratrol added. In four ounces of MonaVie Pulse there are 0.8g of plant sterols. I couldn’t find the amount of resveratrol. On Amazon, I found CholestOff, which actually has 0.9g of plant sterols. The 240 tablets, 120 servings, costs $22.22, which is 18.5 cents a day or $67.59 a year.

MonaVie Pulse is typically the same price as MonaVie Active above (around $2610, but cheaper if bought in bulk) and it too will cost you thousands more than the much obvious cheaper solution.

What about the resveratrol? Without knowing how much is in MonaVie Pulse, we can’t really make a fair price comparison. There is this resveratrol, which will cost you $76.19 a year. The combination of CholestOff and this resveratrol is still a bargain at around $140 compared to spending a couple of thousand dollars and not knowing how much resveratrol you’ll get.

MonaVie M(mun) – This MonaVie juice’s star ingredient is Wellmune, a patented derivative of baker’s yeast from the pharmaceutical company, Biothera. Four ounces of MonaVie M(mun) has 250mg of Wellmune in it. Once again, I went to Amazon and found Immune Health Basics, which has 500mg of Wellmune. It costs $37.49 for 60 capsules or about 62.5 cents for 500mg. Since this is double the amount in MonaVie, the true cost per serving would be a little more than 31 cents. It costs $114 for a year’s supply of the same amount of Immune Health Basics as you’d get in MonaVie M(mun).

The pricing of M(mun) follows that of MonaVie Active and MonaVie Pulse above, meaning that you’d save thousands by buying the capsules of Immune Health Basics.

When you do a little more research you’ll find that Wellmune is also similar to beta glucans, a pill that you also might be able to find cheaply. When I last looked into Wellmune, around the time that MonaVie announced M(mun), research as to whether it was helpful was conflicting. One study of people found that they missed no more sick days than the placebo group when taking the product.

MonaVie MX – This MonaVie juice has the star ingredients of Active (glucosamine) and M(mun) Wellmune. Also, in addition to the basic 19 fruit juices in the juice it has 11 vegetables. Below, we’ll cover in more detail why this isn’t necessarily a good thing. As for pricing, this product like all of MonaVie juices is around $40, but in this case a few extra dollars due to having the glucosamine and the Wellmune in it.

MonaVie Essential and MonaVie Kosher – MonaVie essential seems to be a rework of “MonaVie Original” which is the basic juice with no star ingredients. MonaVie Kosher is a basic juice with no star ingredients that has been certified Kosher.

Bottom Line on MonaVie Nutrition: Any way you slice it (pun intended), MonaVie is not a good source of nutrition when compared to time-tested advice of just eating fruits and vegetables. If you are thinking about MonaVie as a dietary supplement, it represents the worst value for you dollar… and it isn’t even close. The examples I gave of a single person spending thousands more than equivalent product is multiplied when you consider a family of four. That family could save an average of over $6000+ a year by replacing MonaVie’s juices with products found in your drug store or on the Internet. Depending on your tax bracket, this simple decision could be the equivalent of getting a $10,000 raise tomorrow or winning a lottery that pays you $10,000 for life.

Does MonaVie Work?

While the talk of many, many testimonials may seem convincing, such testimonials are typical with any MLM product, especially health ones. The fact that you can many testimonials for dozens of other MLM products shows that these testimonials are not unique to MonaVie products… or any ingredients in those products. Instead, there’s a wide variety of psychological phenomena with MLM health products that give people the perception that the products work. For more details see:No Your MLM Health Product Does Not “Work.”

No Barriers to Entry – Since anyone can be a distributor for usually very little money, anyone can be your direct competitor.

MLM Distributors Lack Control of the Business – MonaVie can take your business away whenever it feels like it for whatever reason they want. I think MJ DeMarco might have said it best in his book Millionaire Fast Lane, “I was involved in four MLM companies. Not once do I remember dictating product decisions, research and marketing, marketing restriction, rules, cost analysis or any other activity fundamental to owning a business. As a network marketer, you don’t own a business – you own a job managing and creating a sales organization… MLM distributors are commissioned employees disguised as entrepreneurs.”

Below we’ll get to the point about MonaVie and pyramid schemes. We’ll cover how “creating a sales organization in MLM” can be considered as participating in illegal pyramid scheme.

MLM and the Reality of Saturation – Recruiting people into MonaVie is where the Diamonds make their money. The problem is that the market is already saturated. You simply can’t go to the top of the pyramid anymore because those positions have been taken for years. In order to get there you have to build thousands of people under you and if those people wanted to be juice salesmen they would have been long before now.

Understanding the Churn Rate in MLM – Somewhere between 60% and 90% of distributors in MLMs leave the business every year because of the first bullet point above. They didn’t make any money. MLMs replace these people with new hopefuls because their sales pitch is enticing. When MonaVie recruits someone they tell them that they too can have health and wealth for them and all their friends. Who wouldn’t want that? The scheme churns through people every year with enough people quitting and joining so that the pyramid scheme never explodes past the population of the earth.

MLM distributors like say that it is up to the person to do the work and not be “Lazy.” Well I’m an expert on Lazy and I can tell you that isn’t the truth. In MLM, losing is not a matter of effort, it’s a mathematical certainty. The circumstances surrounding the system set people up to fail.

MonaVie’s Illegal Health Claims

When I first wrote about MonaVie and wondered why people would spend $45 on juice, I had no idea how the product was marketed. I was shocked as distributors left comments connecting MonaVie to helping with cancer, autism, fibromyalgia, and just about any and every other medical condition under the sun. MonaVie has not been approved by the FDA to help with such conditions making these claims illegal.

It wasn’t until later that I learned that MonaVie CEO was the Vice President of Dynamic Essentials a company that madeRoyal Tondan Limu juice. The FDA warned the company about website claims to treat various diseases such as cancer, arthritis, and Attention Deficit Disorder caused their products to be in violation of the law. The company continued to sell the product and the FDA and Department of Justice fined the company millions and went as far as destroying the product. The action essentially put an end to Dynamic Essentials.

Dallin Larsen held “fireside chats” with hundreds of people. There is one “fireside” chat on Archive.org. He tells this convincing story how Dynamic Essentials is part of a publicly traded company with products in Wal-Mart and that they found this fascinating ingredient called Limu Moui. He goes on to essentially claim that limu that unique benefits to help with the system. At the 7:25 minute mark of the audio, Larsen tells of how he just came back from a tour talking to people who have used the product and tells of the stories he heard and how it has helping with asthma, arthritis, chronic fatique, fibromyalgia, lupis, migrane headaches, etc. He then goes to say that “We can’t make [the claim that you aren’t going to get cancer and heart disease]… I know that this product is having a benefitial impact on people’s health.

MonaVie, is an identical copy-cat of Royal Tongan Limu juice, but with acai instead of limu. The illegal health claims that I’ve seen in the comments on my article and elsewhere on the Internet come straight from the leadership.

Newsweek did a story on MonaVie in which Dallin Larsen acknowledged that while MonaVie has an 18-person compliance team which investigates distributors making false claims, “It’s next to impossible, like herding cats.” In short, MonaVie opened Pandora’s Box with their distribution system. The proper solution to fix this systemic problem is to distribute the product like Ocean Spray or Welch which doesn’t have these problems. MonaVie refuses this logical solution that would prevent consumers from be defrauded out of their hard-earned money and still allow them to get the product to those who were interested in it.

When I found MonaVie distributor Mitch Biggs claiming that MonaVie prevents swine flu, I decided to help out MonaVie’s compliance team and let them know. Mitch Biggs should know better. He was a MonaVie Emerald Executive, one of the top 166 distributors at the time, who make an average $155,000 a year. My goal was to find out how MonaVie would enforce the its policies and procedures which allow it to end a distributorship who is caught making illegal claims. Would MonaVie do what’s right and make an example to show distributors that they can’t be making these claims? Or would MonaVie cave, not wanting to create a rift amongst its distributors? The answer: Mitch Biggs Scams People and MonaVie Condones It.

A recent commenter suggested that MonaVie’s compliance was doing its job, so I showed him this story, which is about two years ago as of this pointing (June 2012). I decided to go an look and see if MonaVie is still letting Mitch Biggs be a distributor, which lead me to this video on a local news show. It seems like Mitch and Ashley Biggs are making erroneous and deceptive claims multiple times saying that MonaVie is an “easy, convenient and tasteful, way to get your fruit every day” and “just an easy, easy, way to get your fruit.” As we saw in a section above, MonaVie’s Nutritional Value, this is quite untrue. The spot even took the effort to bring a vase of 13 fruits to illustrate the deception.

It may seem like I’m picking on one distributor, but this is a leading distributor who was made an example of once before and yet continues to break the law publicly. If this is the stuff that is going on in the open, imagine what is going on behind closed doors!

Some may suggest that this is an isolated case – one example of a bad seed that every industry has. That’s simply untrue. It is a systematic problem which is so prevalent that Dr. Johnny Bowden’s article that I mentioned at the very beginning of this article was titled, “No More Claiming MonaVie Cures Cancer!” These are the kinds of things that happens when you tell distributors that they can be millionaires if you recruit enough people to buy a juice that happens to be priced at 20 times more than other juices. The distributors have to come up with some way to market the obscenely overpriced product. They are naturally going to try to make a point that it is a value for consumers as a replacement for medicine or something seemingly expensive like buying a vase of 13 fruits.

MonaVie’s Deceptive Marketing

If I were to go into depth about MonaVie’s deceptive marketing, I would never finish writing this article. This article is already so long that I wonder if you’ll read it. There’s just too much to say. I also think I covered a lot of it above. So here I’ll just give a few more examples:

In the above section, MonaVie’s Nutritional Value, I went into detailed the 13-servings of fruit and ORAC score myth. That’s a typical example of the marketing to keep in mind. Here are a few others:

19 fruits in the juice – MonaVie adds all these juices because the public has a perception that more juices is better. That’s not necessarily true. Regular readers know that a mutual fund with more stocks does not necessarily out-perform those with fewer stocks. A pizza with a 7-cheese blend is not necessarily better than one with a 3-cheese blend. In fact, the more ingredients, the easier it is to dilute the ingredients that MonaVie touts like acai. When you have 18 other fruits in addition to acai, the amount of acai could be less than 6% and still be the first ingredient on the list. However, if MonaVie only had 2 fruits and acai was listed first, you’d know that you are getting at least 50% acai in every ounce.

Freeze-dried acai – For years MonaVie touted the amount of freeze-dried acai because it had a huge ORAC score. The reason it got such a high score is the fact that water was taken out, which allowed them to pack more powder per ounce. However, it was shown that MonaVie is less than 2% freeze-dried acai, meaning that even with a high score, there wasn’t enough of it to make a significant difference.

MonaVie’s “Studies”

MonaVie relies heavily on their Scientific Advisory Board, specifically Dr. Alexander Schauss. Schauss has a long list of reputation problems. One of them was that he faked his credentials and got a mail-order PhD degree from California Coast University. MonaVie pitched Schauss as an expert on acai, but they are the only ones who recognized him for anything like this. The reality is that Schauss was the supplier of his OptiAcai brand to MonaVie.

Schauss, through his AIBMR Life Sciences, pumped out a lot of “research” which could fool some people into thinking that there was actual science. In fact, MonaVie product specialist Erica Bryant wrote distributors to tell them that AIBMR is the only source of that they should use. Some of this research led to ridiculous papers such as this “Double-Blinded, Placebo-Controlled Study” on MonaVie by Schauss. It doesn’t take a scientist to see that it was made for the specific purpose of giving distributors fuel to recruit more people. Tellingly, the final conclusion of the study made mention of another study that showed that eating fruit had positive results as well.

“Not all multilevel marketing plans are legitimate. Some are pyramid schemes. It’s best not to get involved in plans where the money you make is based primarily on the number of distributors you recruit and your sales to them, rather than on your sales to people outside the plan who intend to use the products.”

“The Commission’s recent cases, however, demonstrate that the sale of goods and service; alone does not necessarily render a multi-level system legitimate. Modern pyramid schemes generally do not blatantly base commissions on the outright payment of fees, but instead try to disguise these payments to appear as if they are based on the sale of goods or services. The most common means employed to achieve this goal is to require a certain level of monthly purchases to qualify for commissions. While the sale of goods and services nominally generates all commissions in a system primarily funded by such purchases, in fact, those commissions are funded by purchases made to obtain the right to participate in the scheme. Each individual who profits, therefore, does so primarily from the payments of others who are themselves making payments in order to obtain their own profit. As discussed above, such a plan is little more than a transfer scheme, dooming the vast majority of participants to financial failure.”

This appears to be how MonaVie works. Distributors in the upline earn commissions based on the purchase of other distibutors below. The distributors below are required to be “active”, which means either:
(A) buying product themselves or
(B) selling twice the requirement to a preferred customer

When a distributor satisfies the requirement by (A) buying product for themselves and MonaVie pays a commission to the upline on that purchase that it can be considered a pyramid scheme using the FTC’s guidelines. This is the typical way that requirement is satisfied. The distributor application for MonaVie prominently includes the Auto-Ship Program (ASP) so that new distributors can satisfy the active by buying product requirement right away.

The option (B) to qualify as active by recruiting enough preferred customers, is a new option. Previously the only method was the above option A) which makes it quite clear that MonaVie could only be viewed as a pyramid scheme. With the new option (B) it becomes a little more complex. Since (A) is a sign of a pyramid scheme, we need data from MonaVie on the percentage of distributors that qualify through the (B) option. (MonaVie doesn’t disclose this information.) Anecdotal evidence tells me that the (B) option is quite rare. As explained in the above section, MonaVie’s Nutritional Value, MonaVie’s juices represent a poor product at an extremely expensive price (approximately 20 times the price, ounce for ounce, of other 100% fruit juices). In the rare case that a preferred customer is buying the product, it is mostly like that they were sold on the illegal medical claims or deceptive marketing, as described in the section above.

For more sources about MLMs and pyramid schemes from the FTC and others, I’ve put together a compilation here: MLMs Vs. Pyramid Schemes

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How you can help put an end to the scam

The best way to put an end to this scam is to go to the FTC Complaint Assistant and file a complaint. A recent article on CNBC had comments from the FTC saying that few people file complaints on these schemes and thus they rarely put in the resources to investigate them. There are two reasons why there are so few complaints:

People are brainwashed from the beginning that the system “works”, and “the only variable is you.” Thus people feel as if it is their own failure rather than recognizing the system was mathematically set up to fail over 99% of people from the beginning.

The FTC doesn’t do anything. You leave a complaint and that’s the end of it. The complainant gets no follow-up from the FTC and there’s never any evidence that the complaint is ever read. It’s fundamentally terrible system… but that’s what we have to work with.

With that said, if you’re as upset as I am about people being lied to and defrauded out of their money, please leave a complaint. If you do, please sent me a quick mail. This way, I’ll have an idea of the minimum number of complaints that MonaVie is getting.

MonaVie Mynt

Update: MonaVie has started marketing to college students and those who have recently graduated. These are probably the worst candidates for such overpriced MLM products. They have little income and often high student loans. I believe that MLMs have nowhere else to turn as the general population know that it’s a scam. I think they believe they will catch them early before they’ve gathered the wisdom to know to stay away.

[Editor’s Note: This article itself is a constant work in progress. I didn’t have the space to get into explaining the scamming behind MonaVie’s MORE charity. Publication deadlines force me to publish this without proofreading. In the future, I hope to go into more of MonaVie’s products like its RVL line of weight loss, which is a copy of other other MLMs and also a terrible value compared to the equivalents in stores. However, at this point, it does more to help people to get this information in their hands quickly and that means saving some of the editing for another day.]

Amway distributor Orrin Woodward, who received a $3 million loan from Monavie he didn’t have to repay if he met certain recruiting distributor goals, according to a lawsuit Amway filed against MonaVie in 2008 chk detail,

Thank you for this article. Just returned from a “Healthy Living Expo” and got a 15-minute, non-stop sales pitch about Mona Vie. The rep took an “antioxidant reading” from a new-fangled machine using my index finger, which shows on a rainbow screen how high or low my level of free radicals vs. antioxidants are in my body today. She was surprised when it shot to the higher end of antioxidants level of green. Blue and Purple are the highest level, yellow and red being at the lowest end. I got the pitch about how her daughter had cancer and this product helped her feel better, how it replaces the nutritive value of 10-13 servings of fruits and vegetables and on and on. Then I asked what’s the bottom line and nearly fainted when told it was $139.00 a month or roughly $30.00/week! I can sure juice, eat, bake, cook and whatnot a heck of a lot of natural fruits and veggies for that price and get a lot more nutrition from them. It wasn’t until I got home and checked out the product did I realize she was hoping to set me up as part of their MLM. What I thought was odd is the business card was stapled to the back of another distributor’s card.
For that kind of money, I should buy beef from the woman selling grass-fed, no antibiotic, no hormone beef!

The machine is calibrated in such a way to make 90% (or some other high number) of people feel like they aren’t getting proper nutrition. Then create the problem and then attempt to sell the cure.. scam 101.

We’ve written about this device in detail before, but in a nutshell it uses old mundane technology to measure the levels of carotenoids in the skin. This is a completely useless measure that is indicative of pretty much nothing of relevance to health or overall antioxidant status. The device cannot detect the levels of water soluble antioxidants and non-carotenoids; it gives no indication of antioxidant status in tissues and organs other than the skin surface (the levels in skin tell us nothing useful); the test results can be drastically influenced by simply eating a carrot or taking a multivitamin; operator error is inherent and the results are not consistently reproducible; and the tissue levels of carotenoids in general don’t correlate with health in any way — in fact, large-scale epidemiological studies keep showing that supplementation with beta-carotene can increase cancer incidence.

Monavie makes money selling the device to the dummies who buy it, and then they make money again when the dummies who buy it use it to convince other dummies to buy into the scam. It’s a dummy-fest!

I understand MLM is a broken system to leverage the majority for the benefits of few.

Much like the 9-5 job I have; but I pay nothing to MonaVie (I don’t buy the product) and I ‘pretend’ I pay for the product and sign up dummies. “Product purchase is not necessary to make money.” Thus I make about $200 dollars a week off Dummys who I have signed up.

Keep signing up suckers; you are paying for my new car.

Instead of alerting the the plebs. Play MonaVie for what it really is a scam to help you get more money. I reckon that will turn even more people away. I’m not in it for profit. I’m already ahead. My day job is merely a formality whilst I make close to 200k a year (only 55k of that is my actual 9-5 salary) from other ‘sources’. The internet is my play ground.

Loved reading all your research….I’ve always been fascinated by how oblivious people are to pyramid scams. About 20 years ago my boyfriend in college took me home to meet his parents and they pitched Amway to us, urging us to quit school to sell it. Never ad I heard of such a company but the presentation sent off alarm bells and I’ve never considered home based or sales type stuff like this to be legit. I enjoyed reading your explanation and wish more people wouldn’t fall these scams.

I’m not a distributor, just a consumer of the Mona Vie product. Just like with any other supplement available at GNC, Walgreens, Walmart, etc. the efficacy of the product is subjective to the individual using it. My husband swears by Vitamin C and takes a supplement daily. I, however, see no noticeable effects from taking it. Are Vitamin C tablets a scam? I would say so, but he would not. Subjective. There are too many people with too many stories of how this product has helped them in their daily lives for you to claim that it is not of benefit. So it doesn’t work for everyone…there is not a supplement out there that does.

We have taken Mona Vie on and off for over 5 years and ALWAYS notice positive effects and always miss the benefits when we don’t have it. These are not “psychosomatic”. You can’t write of hundreds of thousands of people having positive effects as being delusional. For every one person making “illegal” medical claims, there are thousands that are just saying “it makes me feel better”. Nothing wrong with that…

Sure it’s more expensive than other juices, but it’s for me to decide if it’s overpriced, yes? It’s like telling every lady with a Coach or Vuitton bag that they are dumb-asses for buying such an overpriced piece of leather. I mean, come on…you can get a purse at Wal-Mart for $5.00…they are exactly the same, right? Right? Who am I (or YOU) to say something is overpriced, when obviously there is a market for the product. We have not found another product that gives us the same benefits or tastes as good as Mona Vie. Simple as that. We don’t mind paying more for this product.

I can’t speak as to the MLM part of the business. That too, is subjective as nobody is forced into going into the business part of it. No doubt, they paint a rosy picture of the money-making potential, but a lot of “legit” businesses do that as well. Check out every outside sales job posted on Monster…promises of easy six-figures and untold bonuses and riches! As with any JOB, it all depends on the amount of effort you are willing to put into it.

I’m sure you’ve made it your mission in life to expose all the wrong-doing in the world. You and you alone have the power to see the “truth” behind it all and the rest of us are just dumb, uneducated, mind-less lemmings following the piper off the cliff. It doesn’t work for YOU, so it cannot possibly work for anyone else. With all the “real” facts, data and experts supposedly behind you, why is Mona Vie still around?

I think I’ll stick with the truth of my own personal experience, not be told by some anonymous fool on the internet that I’m a schmuck for drinking this juice and continue to drink and enjoy Mona Vie.

If someone goes around claiming that toast cured their cancer, and tries to make money by selling you that toast at outrageous prices, it’s a scam. There’s a scientific universally-approved way of proven whether something works by testing it in large-scale clinical trials vs. a placebo. It’s a very objective test.

There are reasons why so many people are claiming that MonaVie worked for them: http://www.aitse.org/no-your-mlm-doesnt-work/. Spend a little time and look at all the other MLM health products (Zrii, Xowii, Xango, Nopalea, Asea) and you’ll find that people selling them believe that they work for them too. I guess that MLM has a monopoly where 100% of the products sold by that distribution method work and not much from any other do (you think I get 6000 comments if I wrote this article about vitamin C). Get 300 million people to try a placebo and mathematically you’ll have 100 million people will say it works. It’s easy to write off a 100 million people. It’s the percentage in a controlled, tested environment that matter.

There are lot more people making illegal claims that you say. I showed in the an article that people making the most money are doing it and when notified, MonaVie does nothing to take their ill-gotten marketing away. I’ve come across hundreds of people marketing MonaVie illegally and I never went out of my way to look for them. They are simply people commenting here and point me to other sites with claims. One is too many. The CEO admitted that keeping the illegal claims is like “herding cats” (http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2008/08/01/a-drink-s-purple-reign.html). I’ve come up with an easy solution for herding the cats, don’t use MLM. Put it in the store and see if people still pay for it. If the product is good then this is the easiest way to eliminate the people making illegal claims.

Like other delusional commenters here you’ve tried to compare MonaVie to fashion. MonaVie is meant to be drunk at home as it requires refrigeration. The lady showing off her Vuitton bag or the guy showing off his equivalent bling (not sure what that is) is typically doing it because it is a status symbol. That’s why the knock-off industry with purses is so big. It’s a way of saying, “I have the money to buy this, so envy me for being successful.”

MonaVie is priced so high for one very specific reason, that’s how the company can profit the most. As Harper’s said, “They couldn’t have it all because Mary Kay’s business model (like that of any multilevel-marketing enterprise) is designed primarily to profit from, rather than enrich, its workforce.” MonaVie distributors are typically required to buy product to qualify for commissions, so the high price serves as a way for MonaVie to charge consumers month after month to be in the business. This high price has a trickle-down effect of people claiming that it works as medicine because medicines can sell for high prices, but juice typically can not.

Just because a small minority of people get tricked into buying snakeoil it doesn’t mean that it is a fair price.

You should be able to speak about the MLM part of the business if you are going to capitalize JOB like all the other MLMers. No one is forced to buy my time-machine either. That doesn’t mean I can legally market it and take people’s money and give them something else. The jobs posted on Monster are real jobs with real work being done. 100% of the people getting those 6-figure jobs actually pay 6-figures – it is very different than MonaVie pitching you a scenario that is only true for 0.1% of people that take the job. Furthermore, success in those jobs is determine by output produced. The people who are making 6-figures in MLM are running illegal pyramid schemes according to the FTC guidelines: http://business.ftc.gov/documents/inv08-bottom-line-about-multi-level-marketing-plans. It’s all money made on the downline: “If the money you make is based on your sales to the public, it may be a legitimate multilevel marketing plan. If the money you make is based on the number of people you recruit and your sales to them, it’s not. It’s a pyramid scheme. Pyramid schemes are illegal, and the vast majority of participants lose money.”

I won’t bother addressing all the false things you said in the last two paragraphs. Just keep in mind that the guy who created MonaVie admitted that was “expensive flavor water. Any claims made are purely hypothetical, unsubstantiated and, quite frankly, bogus.”

If you want to waste your money on MonaVie, that’s your own choice. Readers of this website are looking for how to maximize the use of the money they have and learn about legit ways of making more money.

A distributor gave me a free bottle of Monavie when I had an abscess in my colon and told me this was a miracle juice from the acai berry that had amazing healing powers. Beyond being tasty koolaid, this did nothing for me and I was not going to dole $120 for a 4-pack. In fact, I had to wonder if this juice was adding to the Prednisone I was taking since the sugar content was so high.

By the end of the bottle I advised my distributor that he had a very tasty juice but the company needed to drop the claims about this thing curing anything. They needed to change the packaging because the bottle suggested this belongs in the Wine & Liquor department in the grocery store when it really needed to be repackaged and put in the juice section in retail grocery stores. The marketing is way off and makes no sense.

In the end, Monavie folded and its claims were proven false when the FDA and other researchers tested it.

Kimberly said: “I’m not a distributor, just a consumer of the Mona Vie product.”

Uh, whatever…your conduct does not line up with that claim, but if that’s the cover story you want to go with, knock yourself out.

Kimberly said: “Just like with any other supplement available at GNC, Walgreens, Walmart, etc. the efficacy of the product is subjective to the individual using it. My husband swears by Vitamin C and takes a supplement daily. I, however, see no noticeable effects from taking it. Are Vitamin C tablets a scam? I would say so, but he would not.”

You’re presenting this entirely the wrong way. In reality, the efficacy of a vitamin C supplement is not subjective. The purpose of the vitamin C supplement is to provide vitamin C, not to correct a disease or cause you to feel anything. If the product contains the advertised amount of vitamin C, then it has fulfilled its purpose. Problems arise when unscrupulous supplement companies, like Monavie, skirt the regulations and promise things that their products cannot deliver.

Kimberly said: “There are too many people with too many stories of how this product has helped them in their daily lives for you to claim that it is not of benefit.”

There are no more people making such claims than there are people who have made similar claims about other debunked snakeoil products throughout history – that’s the modus operandi of these scams. There is a word that describes distributors who go around making fantastic unverifiable snakeoil wonder-cure claims about Monavie — and that word is A-HOLE.

Kimberly said: “So it doesn’t work for everyone…there is not a supplement out there that does.”

Define “work”. All it really has to do to work is be wet and fruity. Any expectation beyond that is not only an idiotic pipe-dream but evidence of an illegal conspiracy to defraud consumers.

Kimberly said: “We have taken Mona Vie on and off for over 5 years and ALWAYS notice positive effects and always miss the benefits when we don’t have it. These are not ‘psychosomatic’. You can’t write of hundreds of thousands of people having positive effects as being delusional. For every one person making ‘illegal’ medical claims, there are thousands that are just saying ‘it makes me feel better’. Nothing wrong with that…”

I don’t have to write off hundreds of thousands of people because they don’t exist. But I can instantly write you off. Done! You don’t even have the common sense to detail what these wondrous effects are that you feel from taking the product – that’s the typical MO of a risk averse distributor who knows that they would otherwise be running afoul of the law. If the product was doing anything worthwhile it would have been thoroughly documented already through scientific studies and published medical case reports. But instead all we get is the same old dodgy BS fairy tales from disembodied anonymous voices like yours.

You need a reality check – fruit juice doesn’t cure diseases — it’s wet and fruity, nothing more. The product’s inventor even admitted that the product is BS — expensive flavored water, so wake the F up and stop this silly destructive game.

Kimberly said: “Sure it’s more expensive than other juices, but it’s for me to decide if it’s overpriced, yes? It’s like telling every lady with a Coach or Vuitton bag that they are dumb-asses for buying such an overpriced piece of leather.”

It’s nothing at all like that, and that laughably pathetic argument was debunked years ago. Monavie is akin to a green garbage bag that some lunatic bag lady (i.e., you) on a street corner is trying to sell to passersby as a Louis Vuitton purse. The inventor of Monavie already told us (as did commonsense) that the juice is analogous to a green garbage bag, and yet here you are still trying to peddle this fantasy about it being a Louis purse — a fantasy, incidentally, that would be readily expected from a Monavie distributor, not a customer.

Kimberly said: “I mean, come on…you can get a purse at Wal-Mart for $5.00…they are exactly the same, right? Right? Who am I (or YOU) to say something is overpriced, when obviously there is a market for the product. We have not found another product that gives us the same benefits or tastes as good as Mona Vie. Simple as that. We don’t mind paying more for this product.”

First of all, the quality of a $5 Wal-Mart purse does not even begin to approach that of a Louis Vuitton — that’s idiotic fallacy #1. Secondly, it sounds like you are indeed doing the equivalent of paying $50 for a $5 Walmart purse, or at least the stupid scenario you’ve created as part of your PR crusade for this snakeoil pyramid scheme is predicated on paying $50 for a $5 Walmart purse. You are selling inert, low grade non-organic swill that’s spiked with sodium benzoate. Monavie is worse than a $5 Walmart purse and yet you pretend that it’s a Louis. That kind of behavior is delusional enough to merit pity, but ultimately I can feel no pity for a con artist.

Kimberly said: ““I can’t speak as to the MLM part of the business.”

Let me guess…you will anyway, right?

Kimberly said: “That too, is subjective as nobody is forced into going into the business part of it. No doubt, they paint a rosy picture of the money-making potential, but a lot of ‘legit’ businesses do that as well. Check out every outside sales job posted on Monster…promises of easy six-figures and untold bonuses and riches! As with any JOB, it all depends on the amount of effort you are willing to put into it.”

Yep, I guessed right. The company is using this shitty joke of a juice as part of a bait-and-switch entry fee into a pyramid scheme. It doesn’t depend on how much effort you put in, hence the nature of the restrictions against such schemes under US law. You can stop pretending to not have skin in the game now because it’s obvious that you do, and like all the others that do, you’re a disingenuous scammer who has come here to read virtually every line from the Monavie playbook and walked away from the effort looking like a fool – nothing more.

Kimberly said: “I’m sure you’ve made it your mission in life to expose all the wrong-doing in the world. You and you alone have the power to see the ‘truth’ behind it all and the rest of us are just dumb, uneducated, mind-less lemmings following the piper off the cliff.”

Yes, if I had to place bets I would guess that you are dumb, uneducated, and a lemming, otherwise you’d be doing something productive with your life instead of this nonsense. I don’t see you as a victim, however, but rather as a victimizer that others should be protected from. Most people would see through your BS instantly, but you’re searching for that one-in-a-million rube who will fall for your BS and pump money into the pyramid. What a sad, sad existence. I have more respect for drug dealers and prostitutes.

Kimberly said: “It doesn’t work for YOU, so it cannot possibly work for anyone else. With all the ‘real’ facts, data and experts supposedly behind you, why is Mona Vie still around?”

It doesn’t “work” for anybody because it’s purple piss in a bottle and was never designed to “work”; it was designed to be window dressing for a fraudulent pyramid scheme enterprise.

Kimberly said: “I think I’ll stick with the truth of my own personal experience, not be told by some anonymous fool on the internet that I’m a schmuck for drinking this juice and continue to drink and enjoy Mona Vie.”

Pfft! You’ll stay on the Monavie train only until a better way to con people out of there hard earned money comes along. We’ll be keeping a vigilant eye out for people like you now and in the future.

I don’t understand Kim’s bitching. She feels like she’s been called a schmuck for drinking Monavie, but I must have missed the part where she was forced to click on the link in Google and read the article against her will.

I’m just saying, if I were a satisfied customer of a given product, I wouldn’t click on a link to an article about that product with a title that makes it pretty clear up front that it has nothing positive to say about it, and I surely wouldn’t act like a victim if I decided to do so against my better judgment.

Hey Kim? Let me give you a little advice for the future. You just don’t argue the merits of the MLM business model when you’re trying to pass yourself off as a customer. A genuine customer would neither know much about the business side of the product, nor would they care to know, and they most certainly wouldn’t go out of their way to try to make it look more favorable than it is by creating false-equivalencies between it and a job search website of all things. That’s shit a distributor would do, you dig what I’m getting at?

As an aside, I’m absolutely troubled by how warped you world-view appears to be, Kim. Lazy is trying to help people, and only a troubled mind could possibly perceive that the way that you have.

Alright, alright. I understand that it’s a self-serving interpretation, and that you probably don’t really see it that way, but you people really need to consider that it only leaves you looking like psychopaths when you try to warp what Lazy is doing here.

Consider, or ponder one thing… if the Acai berry was that good, and the juice that awesome… do you think for a second that the major juice companies would stand by and let an earth shaking, life changing, universe altering opportunity be monopolized by Mona Vie?

Mona Vie is so disturbingly bad that they (main stream juice) don’t even acknowledge Mona Vie Exists. If the product were THAT good Mona Vie wouldn’t be making millions(???) in the MLM market, they would be competing against the main stream juice suppliers who would be competing for billions in the consumer market.

don’t see that happening do you?

there are view here that might remember me – I used to post stuff a couple years ago, and I still enjoy MV from my upline from time to time for free, although not as often as I used to because “the” down line has been all but wiped out… but I occasionally get some free and it makes for very interesting and unusual libations.. nobody actually buys MV in the normal world…. so I like to go for an Acie drop, 2 parts MV 1 part vodka and a splash of Contreau… or if feeling particular feisty try the ‘Energizer’… 1 part MV (M)mum, 1 part Redbull, and 6 shots of scotch, your preference. Use the (M)mum because folks can’t figure out what the hell it is anyway and it sound really kewl .. the Mmum energizer. Why not use Energize you think.. fair question! I hate the stuff it tastes like turds. If I want energy I look for Gaurana… wonder if MV has any of that in it?

I digress.

You sound like a nice lady and I hope you drink, cuz you probably will be put off by snarky attitude if you don’t. But I ain’t lying, whenever I drink the ‘Energizer’ by lower back pain goes away. Doctors said I would be living with this for the rest of my life and none of the cancer treatments worked. but MV with alcohol works for me.

so you have several real honest replies to your comments, and my not so sincere sounding reply (but a lot of fun eh?) .. seriously, the sooner you discover the truth about MV the better, because you are going to waste a lot of time and money chasing the MV illusion for health and prosperity.

When the inventor says in internal memos that are now released that it is “expensive flavored water”, we can be pretty sure there was never any science behind it. It’s a shame that I can’t find a lawyer that wants to make a ton of money suing them. (I haven’t looked, I’ve got enough other things going on.)

I was looking through your comments and you stated that you will be checking Jeunesse Global.

I just want to know whether this MLM company is another one of those scams?

The products that I have seen have profoundly benefited a lot of people however operates under a MLM business model. When I look for these type of products, they are no where to be found in beauty shops, pharmaceuticals or health shops.

It makes me extremely confused that a great product has a flawed MLM business model.

The “profoundly benefit a lot of people” storyline is a common one with MLM. Health companies choose to use the MLM distribution model because their product couldn’t exist well on its own. To learn more read No, Your MLM Product Doesn’t Work. It’s an article that a group of doctors, researchers, and scientists have endorsed on the topic. I put a lot of hours into it, and it’s the best insight into the topic you’ll find anywhere.

I haven’t gotten to Jeunesse Global, but you can look at any number of health MLM products: Zrii, MonaVie, Protandim, Vemma, Nopalea, Asea, Xocai, Xango, Xowii, Jusuru, etc. and there’s no great product there. There’s a confluence of psychological factors that are mentioned in the above link to make people believe they are.

1. I made more than I’ve spent every week for the last 5 years – but you’ll say it’s not true even if you have proof.
2. My migraines are gone, so is my scleroderma, although I don’t tell anyone Monavie did it. I tell them it had something nutritional in it my body was missing to heal itself. I’ve never heard anyone say Monavie is a cure for cancer – depends on who you talk to. Perhaps my info. comes from more reputable sources?
3. I put my finger on several fruits and in the machine and got a low score. I then put it on a cup I’d drank Monavie from, and rinsed out, and my finger scanned in the highest range. You really think the machine “knows” what fruit your finger dipped in and slants results?
4. My dr. saw me go from hypertension to normal blood pressure in just 4 weeks from the start of taking pulse. This was after I was allergic to 3 different medications.
5. I asked someone I know to dis-prove Monavie so I’d have an excuse to say no all those years ago. She’s got her PhD in biochemistry – and basically her job is to determine what medications and other substances actually penetrate the cell to benefit the body – otherwise, it’s useless and goes out of the body as fast as it goes in. She tried to prove it didn’t work but the research was sound and the scanner shows it DOES get into and help the body.
It’s amazing to me how someone can devote their time and reputation to discrediting people (like those who comment here with the truth) who they don’t know just because their experiences differ from what you write on your blog.

“I made more than I’ve spent every week for the last 5 years — but you’ll say it’s not true even if you have proof.”

I won’t say it’s not true. I would say it’s extremely not likely to be true, but it is possible. Mathematical analysis of the MonaVie Income and Disclosure Statement shows that 99.54% of MonaVie Distributors lose money. So maybe you 1 of the 46 in 10,000 who make money. I could also show how it is mathematically a very bad idea to play the lottery. It would still be true even if a lottery winner shows up and says his experience is otherwise.

But just to play the game, please supply your proof.

works4me said,

“My migraines are gone, so is my scleroderma, although I don’t tell anyone Monavie did it. I tell them it had something nutritional in it my body was missing to heal itself. I’ve never heard anyone say Monavie is a cure for cancer — depends on who you talk to. Perhaps my info. comes from more reputable sources?”

As the article showed the inventor of MonaVie himself called it “expensive flavored water. Any claims made are purely hypothetical, unsubstantiated and, quite frankly, bogus.” It’s irrelevant if your migraines or scleroderma happened to disappear, because it is clear that MonaVie had nothing to do with it. Not only that, but the “heal itself” is a red flag of quackery, just what snake oil salesman like yourself peddle.

works4me said,

“I put my finger on several fruits and in the machine and got a low score. I then put it on a cup I’d drank Monavie from, and rinsed out, and my finger scanned in the highest range. You really think the machine ‘knows’ what fruit your finger dipped in and slants results?”

Putting your finger on a fruit and scanning it in a machine isn’t going to tell you anything. You think carrying around bananas all day is going to do anything. Do you think soaking your hand in fruit juice is going to help you. What you are measuring is not related to how healthy a particular food is. There’s a whole section of the article that makes it clear that juice is not healthy.

works4me said,

“My dr. saw me go from hypertension to normal blood pressure in just 4 weeks from the start of taking pulse. This was after I was allergic to 3 different medications.”

While you are giving proof of the profits above, please provide us with your doctor’s note corroborating your story.

works4me said,

“I asked someone I know to dis-prove Monavie so I’d have an excuse to say no all those years ago. She’s got her PhD in biochemistry — and basically her job is to determine what medications and other substances actually penetrate the cell to benefit the body — otherwise, it’s useless and goes out of the body as fast as it goes in. She tried to prove it didn’t work but the research was sound and the scanner shows it DOES get into and help the body.”

You should have just linked them to this article all those years ago. The inventor of MonaVie himself has disproved MonaVie… there’s really nothing else to say on the matter…

… wait there is a bit else to say. It’s not up to your friend to disprove MonaVie… it is up to MonaVie to prove it. I could claim that I have a talking unicorn in my garage. I could challenge you to disprove it, but it would be ridiculous to expect you to do such a thing. It’s common sense that it would be on me to prove it in the first place. You are working backwards, and anyone with a PhD in biochemistry would tell you so… if it really is a credible story and not a fable.

The scanner you are referring to is one that has been disproved in this space almost a year ago. Here’s a quote: “The device is a retread of a similar quack-box (Biophotonic Scanner) sold by Utah MLM Pharmanex some years ago. It’s based on Ramen spectroscopy, and in the very best case scenario a Ramen scan of the finger would be useful only for measuring carotenoid levels in the outer layer of the skin, which is one of the main places that carotenoids naturally bioaccumulate due to their high fat solubility (e.g., people can turn orange from regularly taking high doses of beta-carotene). The method does not measure any other type of antioxidants (including all water-soluble antioxidants) or distinguish between beta-carotene and other carotenodids (like lutein, lycopene, zeaxanthin, etc.), nor does it provide a valid indication of overall antioxidant status or antioxidant status in any specific organ. The readings will go off the chart by simply taking a beta-carotene supplement, and since Monavie products are fortified with beta-carotene, it’s a fait accompli that skin beta-carotene levels will go up after consuming the products.

The scanner has no clinical or diagnostic value whatsoever and buying it would be a colossal waste of money.”

Please show that the scanner is a clear and accurate measure of health and that taking a very cheap beta-carotene supplement wouldn’t impact the results.

works4me said,

“It’s amazing to me how someone can devote their time and reputation to discrediting people (like those who comment here with the truth) who they don’t know just because their experiences differ from what you write on your blog.”

It’s amazing to me that people can support a scam that the company’s own inventor admits to. It has nothing to do with experience… it’s just simple science No Your MLM Doesn’t Work.

I attended a town day business faire today in MA. I thought I was walking up to a booth about wine. It was Mona Vie. I had never heard of it. The representative told me the scanner used the same technology as the Hubble Telescope to measure the rings of Saturn! The thing looks like a cheap pencil sharpener! After that, I let them scan my finger. Supposedly, I’m close to death. Got the hard sell on the drink. Declined. Just had a full checkup, blood tests and all a few months ago. My doctor says I’m in great shape! Who should I believe? I think I’ll resist listening to the very overweight, tired looking rep with the “health scanner.”. They should call it a health “scammer!”

I looked through the article and comments and I must say, as a newby in MLM (since January 2013) you are wrong (at least in a matter of saying that MLM products or binary systems does not work).
I proved myself the success is based on Napoleon Hill’s and Robert Kiyosaki’s claims. Think positively. MLM is helping people, try to find the Social Business, a Nobel Prize honoured Professor Yunas promotes. It is close to MLM. It is not a pyramid, one buys products and recommend them to others. Two of my friends have made real serious money at Monavie. They are Black Diamonds having lots of Liders (Rubies, Emeralds, Diamonds) within their organisations. You say that is less than 1% – BS! It is much more, as I know many people who sticked from ordinary job to Social Marketing oriented, and they are successfull.

The MonaVie income disclosure statement is publicly available and you can see that it is less than 1%… that’s from the company itself.

I don’t know why you rant about positivity and negativity. Sounds like you are confused. This website is about being positive and helping people avoid the negative experience of being scammed by MonaVie and its ~$40 juice. For example, I write dozens of positive articles showing people how to save money: http://www.lazymanandmoney.com/save-money/.

First of all, I would like to apologise to those, who has felt resentful because of my post.

I misspelled Professor Yunus family name, so here is his website, and there is only one step ahead from his ‘social industry’ claim to MLM busieness, as a platform for helping many people all over the world.

I agree Napoleon Hill was not involved in any MLM business, but his positive-oriented guideline shows how to be successfull anyway. And that is the solid base not only for the MLM business.

Concerning 1% of successfull people in Monavie, I ment hundreds of people who are, actually, earning enough money for everyday life working as MV distributors. Not all of them are liders in company’s hierarchy but are successfull enough. That is why I said the system works.

As for the products. My friend who is Dietary Doctor, showed us many examples of her patients, who reported improvement of health conditions (proven by the blood tests for example), after supplementing with Monavie’s both juice and RVL. I am not a doctor nor a scientist but real examples must to be considered.

I am not English native so any mistakes of spelling, grammar and syntax are not relevant.

That’s all, I will not write any other posts here, so you can just leave my comments without any response.

A “social industry” would be well-covered by an affiliate program. When you graft something good and legal like that with an illegal pyramid scheme of recruiting others to get your money back you get an MLM.

It’s fine and great to be positive. There’s nothing wrong with that. However, cigarette salesmen and a den of pick-pockets would also be positive of their industries. Look into cognitive dissonance.

The problem with throwing around names like Yunus and Napoleon Hill is that you are using an appeal to authority fallacy to misrepresent them as approving of MLM… when they did not.

It’s fine that you met hundreds of people who do make money in MonaVie. I could go to the annual convention and meet them as well. What you won’t see is the hundreds of thousands of people who lose thousands of dollars. It’s like showing people who won $5 to a few million in the lottery and ignoring all the others who lose.

Distributors always have anonymous friends who are doctors who show examples, but there are never any concrete documented examples. The blood tests are usually things like TBARS which is not proof of helping anything. Again, you are not a doctor or scientist, but you can see that I’ve shown several doctors and scientists reviews of the product in the article.

You say that real examples must be considered. What must be considered is that they shouldn’t be considered… because just about every MLM has reports of real examples, but again nothing that has been scientifically documented. It’s like people claiming to be abducted by aliens… there are stories, but not surprisingly there’s never any proof.

Sorry, I won’t leave your comments here without a response because you are simply wrong at every level. If you aren’t going to learn to stop scamming people, I’ll point out to others how you are doing it… even if you don’t realize it because you’ve just been taught by your upline.

I know this is not adding much to the thread, so I will apologize now, but could not help myself and felt I should at least thank you Jeanie for sharing, you too Vogel, for making me laugh, that is hysterical.

I’m not a doctor, distributor, purchaser, consumer of this product. I work for a packaging company who makes packaging for companies like MV. Couple of points from my perspective:
1) If it’s illegal to sell and detrimental to society (like meth), then the people making it and selling itshould be prosecuted. I don’t think Mona Vie falls into this category.
2) If they are falsifying claims, then someone should file a substantial law suit with them. It sounds like you may have a case to pursue. I don’t think that the evidence would hold up, but I’m no lawyer or judge
3) If it’s not illegal and not punishable by American law, then what’s the deal here? I go to Salt Lake are for work every month and the shear amount of jobs that companies like these make are staggering. The SLC economy is doing quite well thanks in large part to the rotating amount of MLM companies there. It’s not just about selling juice, there are entire industries in SLC supplying these companies, making money, and creating jobs. Accountants, bottle suppliers, box makers, construction for new buildings, label printers, marketing firms, networking companies, lawyers, etc…fighting against something online is your perogative, but what will it actually accomplish? Say you succeed an tear down every MLM. What’s been done now? Basically, a crap load of people are out of work or hurting financially.

Like I said, I have never participated in, endorsed, purchased, or sold any of these items from any of the companies. However, it seems to me like your vendetta is vindictive and short sided. If your goal is educate the public, then great. But why? Is it really all that horrible to buy these things like tobacco is? Or is it just poor financial decisions? People buy $40,000 cars all the time when all they needed was a $5,000 one to get around. Why? Because it makes them feel good. People overpay for crap all the time and all they are getting is a false hope for something better. Houses, cars, computers, clothes, juice, watches, furniture. These aren’t scams, just American capitalism.

You are free (obviously) to do what you’d like to do, but just ask yourself, what happens if you get what you want? What’s the end goal of all of this stuff? I can tell you what happens to me; My family and the company I work for lose money. A fair amount. Just a different perspective that you may not have considered. Hard working Americans providing services and products lose if you win. And what do you win? I don’t know, maybe you work for a company that stands to pick up market share and benefit from these guys failing.

Point of long rant? I guess I don’t really know…Just another point of view. You’ve probably already considered it though.

2) I have documented quite clearly that they’ve falsified claims. Some are direct from corporate, but a majority are from their sales force which are for legal purposes similar to independent contractors. It’s an extremely difficult lawsuit to structure. You could sue all the distributors individually, but many are good people who are just getting scammed and don’t realize it. You can sue the company itself, but they’d say that they’ve structured the company legally in a way that minimizes their liability. I’m not a lawyer either, but I’ve talked to more than a few and they’ve all rolled their eyes because it is simply too difficult given the legal system that we have in place. It’s not about whether there’s a legitimate claim, but the practicality of spending millions to fight a big company, that has made a great attempt to limit their liability in this legal system, over a $40 bottle of juice.

3) Again, it is illegal and punishable by law, just really hard to enforce. After all it took the FTC a decade to shut down the aforementioned Fortune Hi-Tech Marketing… and that’s FTC.

Getting into the economics of it, the point you make is a little silly. It’s almost like saying Bernie Madoff employed a staff of people, so we should let him continue to run a scheme that bilks people out of billions? Enron employed a lot of people. Why not just let that go?

If you take a little time to look at the MonaVie income disclosure statements, you’ll see that the vast majority of these people lose money. These are not typically your white-color businessmen, but people who can least afford it… people who are desperate for any kind of income. It’s hurting the people who might not have got the education to realize the scam this is.

Overall, it’s somewhere between $30-50 billion dollars that is being spent annually on these products. If I get what I want there will be a couple dozen MonaVie distributors who might not make their $500,000, but hundreds of thousands of people (who really need it) will keep their $1500 a year. That money will most likely get used to buy things. Hey it can buy a lot more juice, which requires a lot more bottle suppliers and label makers. That in turn will create many more jobs that what you are see today. You could even find that with all the new demand for product that your company has more business than it ever expected and passing it on to the employees in the form of a raise. In short, all this money would either find its way back in the economy or in desperately needed savings.

I won’t cry for the Salt Lake City. When the FTC has warned multiple times that these can be pyramid schemes, and even shut down a few, they should know that they are built on a house of cards. I presume bottle and label makers will continue to make products for other companies. I presume that the lawyers (if they were any good) will find jobs elsewhere. In my opinion, SLC has built that MLM economy by defrauding the rest of America… and even expanding it to the rest of the world. They shouldn’t have benefited from it from the first place.

People know what they are getting into with tobacco. They aren’t being mislead. They aren’t forced to buy the tobacco as an admission fee to a business opportunity that isn’t honestly there. Cars are the same way. These products compete against each other in a fair market. The show their value and aren’t “expensive flavored water” to use the inventors’ own words. Spend some time reading this site. I’ve written over 1700 articles here. You will find that I’m not against American capitalism. I’m against defrauding people.

In your opinion are there any legitimate MLM’s ie: AVON, Amway,Herbalife, or Warren Buffets “Pampered Chef”? How do you distinguish? Why have they been teaching “Network Marketing” in Harvard and other business schools for the last 15 to 20 years? Don’t get mad at me for asking….

That short question has a long answer. There are probably thousands of MLMs out there and I don’t have the time to investigate them all. Even if I did, most do not make the necessary information available for one to know. It’s a little like looking at a black box and speculating what’s inside. For the most part

They have never taught MLM or Network Marketing at Harvard. It’s a rumor that the Harvard University dispelled in the Wall Street Journal in 1995. In that article they made the point that it went back to multilevel consultant Beverly Nadler stating it in 1984 without attribution (in other words, it’s not known where she got the information, but Harvard itself denies it.)

So here we are, just a few days shy of 30 years later, and almost 20 years after the Harvard-MLM rumor had been debunked… and people are still trying to spread it. What about that seems legitimate to you?

The meth thing was to show how ridiculous it is to compare the two. One is punishable by law, the other (MLM juice) is simply people taking risks to make money and sell a product. No real crime.

The Madoff thing is a perfect example! He did create jobs, but then was punished by the law. I’m sure those people found other jobs. I’m just saying, if MLM companies are as bad as Ponzi schemes, then prove it in a court of law and punish the bad guys. You have written over 1700 articles, so you’re clearly passionate, but what’s been accomplished? We have a system of justice that can be used. This article, though well documented, cited, and researched, will ultimately not put a sizable dent in the industry. Will a few people read it and change their minds, yeah. Will the couple in Singapore living off of $5/day see a chance to make generational changing wealth and take a risk still? Most definitely. Those are the people that would need protecting if this is so bad and this forum is a poor way to protect them. Again, if it’s as bad as you claim.

Here’s what you have shown, that you can research and write articles. But why? If it’s to protect innocent people, I would argue that it won’t reach the people you deem to be innocent. If it’s to piss off the MLM folks, then mission accomplished. If you want to get rid of the industry all together, then stop writing and start acting. I’m sure it’s tough and difficult, but so was the Ponzi stuff and Enron stuff and on an on. Anything worthwhile is going to be difficult. Take them to court, present the evidence, get paid 100’s of millions, and start more legit companies.

If you’re not willing to do what it takes, then you are truly a lazy man with weak principles (though I don’t know you, just what i’ve observed through your writing). Your true values are dictated by your desire to see change occur and do what’s necessary. I would say that you don’t really value the defrauding of people, but merely like to talk and write about it. Which has some value, but not what it takes to make the change you claim to be for. Unless I’m missing something, your 1700 articles over 6 years have stopped the MLM’s from growing…how? They are some of the fastest growing companies in the world…

I guess my question is this, is all this work really accomplishing what you want to accomplish? Seems like a lot to go through just to prove a point. Like you are looking for a teacher to grade your website and give you an A for research and authorship.

I think with the Meth thing you confused an illegal product with an illegal distribution method. There’s a difference. Running a illegal pyramid scheme is still a “real crime” and people are real victims. It’s got a name… fraud.

I’ve written over 1700 articles about personal finance. I’m passionate about helping people. It’s accomplished a ton according to the mail and the comments I receive.

Feel free to use the system of justice and prove MonaVie wrong in a court of law. I put forth a blue-print for you. I don’t have the money to do it. If you have the money to do it, then please go ahead. If you want to fund me and I’ll be happy to do what I can to fight it with your money.

You seem to make a point that because it won’t make a sizable dent, why try? Police can’t stop all crime, so maybe they should give up too. For the thousands and thousands of families who have gotten the information they needed to make an informed decision, it’s made a significant difference. I’ve had nearly 3.5 million readers now. I can’t say that I’ve helped every one of them, and surely some are repeats, but I don’t think it’s a stretch to say that I’ve people millions and millions of dollars. It’s certainly worth it.

It’s unfortunate that I can’t get to the person in Singapore living off of $5/day. However, I have had people in various countries (I think Singapore was actually one of them) see this site and ask me to help them publish it in their country. Maybe that has helped a few people in Singapore. If you can think of a better way to protect them with our resources available, please suggest it.

I don’t think you know what you are talking about with regard to the judicial process. You mentioned before that you are not a lawyer. I’m not one either, but I’ve talked with many of them about the road you are suggesting and their legal opinion was that it was a waste of time and money.

In fact, you reminded me that back in 2010 someone did take MonaVie to court. I almost forgot about it and just now looked it up. An MLM attorney here opined on the case saying, “The lawyers in Arkansas better have some serious cash because they’ve just signed up for some ridiculously expensive litigation. Proving that there’s a pattern of misconduct amongst tens of thousands of distributors will be a challenging task and require some substantial discovery.”

If you can afford “ridiculously expensive litigation”, then good for you. I can’t.

You might wonder what ever happened to the lawsuit. Well MonaVie settled the case admitting no wrong doing, and created a 4.5 Million dollar settlement fund.

So in the dream world you state, “Take them to court, present the evidence, get paid 100?s of millions…” simply doesn’t exist unless you are funding it with millions.

Capitalist said, “Your true values are dictated by your desire to see change occur and do what’s necessary. I would say that you don’t really value the defrauding of people, but merely like to talk and write about it. Which has some value, but not what it takes to make the change you claim to be for.”

I think you greatly underestimate the value of educating people. Even in a world where I have the millions to take down one company, like the FTC did with Fortune High-Tech Marketing, it isn’t going to stop the industry. So now you want me to spend billions going after all of them in court? Again, give me the billions and we’ll see where it takes us.

I think I’m doing a much better job educating people than you give credit for. You say that these companies are growing, but have you looked at Google Trends for MonaVie? They are around 25% of their April 2008 high (represented by 100). You might be interested to know that I published the article in April of 2008, and you can see that from the first comment placed.

You say these MLMs are growing and yet it would appear that MonaVie has lost 75% of its attention in the time I wrote about it. I thought they should be “some of the fastest growing companies in the world”, not getting decimated. Then again, this should come as no surprise as One24 quickly fizzled when I wrote about them. Their latest Google Trends is 0. ViSalus’ distributors were cut in half as they reported in public filings. LifeVantage’s CEO on the last conference call mentioned that they weren’t happy (my words) with the lack of growth over the last 5 quarters.

I’m not seeing the same growth you are talking about.

I don’t know if I can take all the credit, but I certainly don’t think it is hurting the situation any and it seems like a great case can be made that it is helping a lot.

I appreciate the discourse on this topic. I’m not at all desiring to take any MLM to court. I’m only motivated to post comments here.

As far as the growth of the industry, I only see if from my end…the companies I do work for have increased their sales over the past couple of years.

I believe you are saying that MLM’s are falsified overpriced items with no discernible amount of value to them being sold through a scandalous, quasi illegal scheme. If they are making false claims, then they are illegal. If these are ponzi schemes then they are illegal. So, yes, the drug analogy still holds true.

As far as the police not stopping crime, I agree with you! They should fight crime. I know plenty of police men. You know how they fight crime?? Ready…they arrest and prosecute bad guys. I don’t know any police men sitting around their desks writing countless articles about how terrible tax evasion is for our society. You know what they do? Go after people.

Now, like I said, I don’t care enough about MLM’s to do something. I only care enough about this conversation to write a few posts. I don’t value changing your opinion very highly, obviously. If I did, I would refute your claims (if I could), claim slander, and take you to court or have you arrested. Getting into a verbal spat in the comment section of a website will hardly do anything. I get that

Education is important, but who are you educating? The people who want it, or the people who need it? Some friends of mine where in Uganda and noticed there were child soldiers being exploited. They filmed a video and brought it to the US to educate. However, education was not the end goal. The end goal was to end child soldiers. You know what they did, wrote their senators, congressmen, and foreign leaders. Traveled all around the country, got onto Oprah, got a bill passed through the US legislation and signed by the president, got written into UN policy and have effectively crippled the LRA advancements. That’s passionate action. They had no budget, but found friends who did. You just need to find wealthy friends who are passionate about the same things you are. I’m not one of them. I’m only trying challenge you, truth be told.

The google trend is gauging interest in internet searches, not company value. Monavie is down in overall sales because the industry is cyclical. The top distributors go from one company to the next. It’s what happens over there. You know who’s not down? The people making all the products for these companies. I know because I’m on their floors watching them increase capacity and throughput on all sorts of items. I did your same google trend search and many of these companies are stable and growing over the same time period. Mary Kay, Avon, Forever Living, Usana, 4Life, Zija, Isagenix, Nuskin. All up or stable over that same period of time.

Clearly, you are making money of this site. My guess is, that’s your main goal. I good goal to say the least. It may not have started that way, but you have found a way to profit here. Some might say that you have benefited a great deal from MLM’s. Your site gets the most traffic through google searches for MLM scams, roughly 300 new clicks/day. You have advertisers on here who are likely paying you to be here. My guess is, you make more money off of MLM’s then the vast majority of the people selling them. Well, I KNOW that’s true because you say that 98% of them are losing money.

According to spyfu and cutestat.com. This website is worth roughly $55,000 right now and you are making $91/day in ad word sales. Not a bad little deal for you. These numbers are almost year old and likely up if user engagement is up.

So, keep making money off the MLM’s. I’ll keep making money off of them too.

I’m not interested in spending the millions/billions that it would take to fight these companies in court.

I haven’t covered any of the companies you mentioned (Mary Kay, Avon, Forever Living, Usana, 4Life, Zija, Isagenix, Nuskin), so I don’t think you can use their growth as any kind of indicator of me not making progress. On the other hand, you can see who I have covered and how they’ve done. I feel pretty good in my success rate.

I don’t like the drug analogy, because making and selling meth is illegal. That isn’t true with any fruit juice that I’m aware of. I think meth is taking it a step too far.

Hmm, when my car was broken into and the crooks stole my GPS the police didn’t even dust for fingerprints. They took my report, but they certainly didn’t attempt to arrest or prosecute the bad guys. I’m not the only person who has this story. In fact, I’ve heard it is fairly comment So I guess you would say that the police obviously aren’t making a dent and should give up.

The police might not sit at a desk about how bad tax evasion is, but that’s probably because it is already common knowledge… no one disputes it. Is someone going to read an article that tax evasion is bad and decide, “Hey I shouldn’t do this?” No. If someone gets information about how a mortgage company is scamming consumers though, they’ll probably think twice before dealing with that company, right? Same thing with these companies. Making the information available and helping consumers educate themselves is certainly the first step.

You presume that I haven’t taken this action when I have. I’ve worked with Robert FitzPatrick and others at Pyramid Scheme Alert. There’s a lot of organizing going on that you probably don’t realize. It’s very high level political stuff and yes, I’m very involved with the time I have. I’ll stress again that busting MLMs is a hobby of mine, it’s not my main focus. It isn’t even the main focus of this website as it comprises of probably fewer than 5% of the posts. If you want to reach people interested in MLM full-time go see the previous website or MLM The Truth.

I know that the Google Trend gauges interest and not value. Unfortunately because MonaVie is not public, it’s probably the best tool available to us. I cited other metrics for the other MLMs that I have covered significantly. I don’t think I mentioned that iJango isn’t even around anymore. If anything, you’ve made the best case for the amount of good work I’ve done, “writing letters.”

Funny thing about website valuations… they are never very reliable. Look at a bunch of bloggers laugh at one company trying to value it: https://twitter.com/BudgetsAreSexy/status/400313536905101313. The bottom line is that you can’t trust any of these valuations. In the case of the one that mentioned AdWords, it’s what companies would have to pay Google’s AdWords program, not what a website owner would make.

You would be wrong in your guess that making money is my main goal with this website. I made more from my websites before I started writing about MLM. Remember I’m not an MLM site, but a personal finance one. Banks, mortgage brokers, and other finance companies pay a lot more for advertising than juice companies – especially ones who prefer to use MLM instead of traditional advertising. I sacrifice a ton of time engaging in these comments and that does impact the amount of money I can make from personal finance articles. I had a friend sell his site (bargaineering.com) to BankRate.com for $3 million. Two of my other friends (GetRichSlowly.org and Consumerism Commentary) also sold for well over a million. If I wanted to make money that would be the path I’d go. I have effectively given up the opportunity to do what they did to help educate people about MLM. Quite often, I lament how much easier my life would have be if I had never heard of MLM.

Your argument comes off like someone complaining that teacher makes $35,000. Clearly teachers should love children and work for free, right? How dare they accept payment for their work educating others?!?! Might I remind you that you made the point on how this article being “well documented, cited, and researched.” I don’t know about your local news, but mine has investigative reporters who I imagine are paid journalists. They expose scams and they are paid. I’ve never heard one person say to them, “Nice little business you got there” to the news for doing it.

I contended that mlm was growing as an industry. Not the people you cover. Claiming you led to there demise is fine, but the people just move on. You really haven’t done anything To impact the industry as a whole

Your cop logic is the Same as people who say that the mlm stuff has helped them. You are saying that because one cop didn’t do his job that cops don’t work?

You can only dream about making the impact that invisible children has done. they literally changed foreign policy. And Jason is doing great now.

I wish you well and hope you can achieve all that you want to do.

To cyberxion
You’re swell. Communication is 7% words but you really nailed me. I’m actually much more disingenuous and weaselly than you realize. Keep being awesome and bringing such insightful dialogue to the conversation. No matter what people say, you are a winner

If you are correct that MLM is a growing industry and I covered growing MLM companies at the time (which is true of One24, MonaVie, ViSalus, and LifeVantage). Some of the people in the MLMs that are collapsing move on, but not necessarily all of them. I don’t think you can show that everyone who leaves all the MLMs I covered goes to another. Logically, and from the emails I’ve read, many of the people who are introduced to MonaVie read this and get the hell out of dodge. They aren’t thinking, “Well maybe I should go look around for a Vemma distributor and get into that.”

I think you need to review the cop logic. Your original point could have been summed up by, “If you can’t take down the whole industry why are you even trying?” My point in bringing up the cops was to show that they don’t stop every crime, and they continue to do what’s within their power to help people. Fighting MLM, like fighting crime, is not an all-or-nothing proposition.

I’m not in an “impact competition” with Invisible Children. I’m very comfortable with the impact I’m doing. If you’ve got a problem with it, maybe you should look in the mirror and try to be part of the solution.

The difference between Lazy Man and you is he earns his profit in a meaningful positive way.

SNAP! (a real soft and meaningful snap mind you)

The part that caught my attention in your meandering was when you said “you know how you fight crime, Ready”…. well….I wasn’t ready. just sitting there minding my own business and BLAMO golly gee willickers Capitalist tap dances his way to center stage and drops a triple traveling time step with a log roll on me.

Then there is the Education thing…. Who are you attempting to educate? What is your passive aggressive somewhat obscure motive in all this? You dilly dally around saying this and that without coming out and saying much that would explain why you would be compelled to “only post here” in little old Lazy Man world without so much a care. Maybe because you just like to say things and see yourself talk a lot? I don’t understand that at all… anyway… If you want user id links to show up in your google or bing searches you should pick a better User name than Capitalist. just saying. Just thought I would educate you a little bit, one educator to another. I know it will probably be a BLAMO moment for you, but that’s the way I roll.

And how do you know all those names “Usana, 4Life, Zija, Isagenix, Nuskin” you just make those up or what? Let me try it…….

I was a sponsor of several polygon progressive that developed search and rescue services called “siin and IIIDLL and 884LL and goo8” but they never found Poly… see, I can’t do it. I really admire being able to know all those capitalistic things like that.

And how can I forget, the comment that started it all…. MLM’s are falsified overpriced items with no discernible amount of value to them being sold through a scandalous, quasi illegal scheme – dang that’s uh, I forgot what I was going to say about that.

you are an odd duck Capitalist, as am I. we are all ducks in the Ponzi pond. I only relish the discourse we are having. No intention of taking you to court and I don’t value changing your opinion. But since you appear to be wandering around a bit I thought I would join you on the walk.

I explained my connection already, I print things for them all or try to, home skillet. I probably make more money off the products then the people who sell them, like the website owner does.

My reason for engaging here is morbid curiosity. I was doing research for a meeting and stumbled over here. The only other place you find such determination to convince others they are right is on religion sites.

Oh Capitalist, your words…they wound me. Whatever will I do, having been judged and found lacking by a disgusting piece of sub-human gutter trash? Listen, I take issue with bullsh*tters is all, and you’ve got the stench of bullsh*t absolutely wafting off of you. Your line of questioning is disingenuous at best, and unless of course you’re simply a world-class idiot, your reliance on false-equivalencies and fallacious arguments is anything but accidental. But no, you’re totally not here because you’re another in a long line of self-serving douche-bags who have recognized the challenge that this article poses to your ability to continue to lie to people. Nah, you’re only here trying to undermine both the article and Lazy’s credibility because you want to challenge him. Of course that’s it. And I’m the Space Pope. You couldn’t be any easier to see through if you were transparent, Capitalist, but do feel free to continue on with your bullshit. Just know that you’re not fooling anyone.

“The only other place you find such determination to convince others they are right is on religion sites.”

See, this is what I’m talking about. It’s another of your limp-dick false-equivalencies. A pathetic attempt to draw an unfavorable comparison that’s meant to insult us, to leave readers with a bad impression of us, or both. You can’t successfully challenge the article itself, so you’ve taken to making pot-shots at it.

You’re pulling the same sort of tired shit that we’ve seen your ilk pull time and again here over the years, and yet you really expect us that you’re only here because you had a couple of minutes to kill? Screw you, asshole.

I’m not sure how it is possible to take the stance that it is not a problem, especially when you seem to recognize that 98% of people lose money and that fact is almost never disclosed.
You quickly moved on from the fraud discussion when you were presented with it. If you condone this fraud as “not a problem”, I would argue you should be the one looking to change yourself.

I thought we established that I am making a big impactimpact at least by the best tools we have to measure. The Invisible Children is a much larger organization of people fighting a group that has considerably few supporters and I think considerably less than 30-50 billion a year in revenue. Their cause was a lot more localized. There are probably several more reasons why it is a ridiculous comparison.

Really you haven’t offered anything of value here except to “challenge” someone to do more to fight something that you don’t view as a problem (essentially backing the defrauding of others). I liked your original economic thought as it was slightly unique, but it was easy to blow out of the water.

I have been drinking the juice for 7 years.. occasionally I miss if my finances are low… i have recommended it to some friends over the years and made a couple dollars… i will continue to drink it until i find something better. it cost less than what i used to put in a blender (organic and wild fruits and veggies are expensive)and i don’t feel as good when i am not drinking monavie.. the only money i put out is to purchase the juice.. we all have the choice to buy it or not.. i am grown and chose to buy it when i can.. where again is the problem?

MonaVie isn’t organic, so I’m not sure why you would compare it to “organic and wild fruits.” The inventor of the product called it “expensive flavored water”, so it seems like you were much better off before knowing what was going into your blender. You may look at my more recent review of the NutriBullet and see that I put fruit in a blender too. It’s a lot cheaper than $1.50 an ounce… and that includes me adding very expensive Greek yogurt.

You ask where again the problem is. I bolded it for you in the early part of the article, “MonaVie is a grossly overpriced product, with little nutritional value, wrapped in a poor business opportunity that appears to be illegal pyramid scheme, supported by nonsensical ‘scientific’ studies and illegal medical claims.” Where is MonaVie not a problem?

Invisible Children started with nothing more than a video camera and a cause. Their challenge was to get the US Governement and UN to act to end a substantial problem. When they started, they had 3 dudes who were college students. If you think it’s easy to get the President of the US to sign a bill into action, you’re crazy. I would argue that what they did is harder than taking Monavie to court. The point is that you were acknowledging that there is a better way to challenge the industry, but you don’t have the means to do it. I’m saying that you lack determination to find the means because you, in your heart, don’t believe it’s that big of a problem.

I have no problems with the scholarship and point of your writings, I have said multiple times that the majority of American industry is simply semi fraudulently persuading people to purchase their products. Lexus has ads that promise you a better life if you buy their cars. Cell phone companies all use limited studies to say that their companies are better than someone else’s. Almost all marketing (in this case including multi level) is based on an unsubstantiated or barely substantiated promise of a better life. These guys included. You have basically proven that Mona Vie is just another company amongst many. Why pick them out? I’m not sure, but it’s a free country. When I ask myself, why would a guy spend so much time focusing on a few companies? The answer is that they are easy targets for you to make some money off of. You have done a great job creating a group of followers, who then go tell their friends to come back and read. The more unique users and readers, the more American Express pays you to advertise. It’s quite brilliant actually and I don’t fault you for it. I’m sure you like pissing off MLM’s and getting letters from them so you can write more so you can get your site at the top of Google so you can get more readers so you can make more money.

I’m probably wrong. I’m sure you will tell me why I’m wrong. I’m sure it’s all about those poor people with freedom to choose and protecting them from making bad choices and then annoying their friends. It sounds like you and I would have a good time discussing this over a beer and would probably have a much more meaningful conversation than can be had over the internet. Since you have chosen this as your medium and I chose to engage, then it’s all we have. You will never convince me that you are doing all you can to bring these companies to their knees and I will never convince you that this is all quite silly and not accomplishing much. You may now have the last word as I have clearly lost this argument, but what did you win? It’s the cycle of internet blogging and the point of my comments, you may win arguments and a few people might change their minds, but you will never make real change sitting behind a computer. Regardless of how convincing you may be logically. We celebrate the lives of people who make real change to real problems and do whatever it takes. That will never be me. It will never be you. We both lack conviction and desire. Your view of the size of the problem and your conviction to change that problem are indicated by the length you will go to end it.

If these MLM’s are as bad as you claim them to be, I hope you prove me wrong and bring them down. I really do. I’m not holding my breath though. I don’t think they’re as bad as you claim and I don’t think this is the best way to make an impact. It IS however, a good way to get followers and make money, so press on, brother, towards your capitalistic end!

I don’t think you realize that filming child soldiers pretty much speaks on its own. You ask 100 people if they support child soldiers and you are probably going to get 100 people say, “Of course not.” Maybe there’s one nut who misunderstands the question. My point: It’s a very easy and obvious cause to support. I’m not saying that Invisible Children had it easy, but I’m saying that rallying support for it was definitely much easier.

MLM is an entire ball of wax. You aren’t even willing to acknowledge there is a problem… and you know that 99% of the people lose money. You have an organization with hundreds of thousands of brainwashed people who petition Washington at the slightest thing that might their industry (See how MLM got excluded from the FTC’s Business Opportunity Rule). You have MLM companies giving politicians money to influence decisions in their favor. Again, I’m a little hazy on my details, but I don’t think Kony had any of this support in the US… and Invisible Children didn’t have to fight it.

Capitalist said, “The point is that you were acknowledging that there is a better way to challenge the industry, but you don’t have the means to do it. I’m saying that you lack determination to find the means because you, in your heart, don’t believe it’s that big of a problem.”

I never made an acknowledged that there is a better way to challenge the industry. Certainly from the lawyers I’ve talked to, the courts isn’t the avenue… and they have the experience in this area. Go look at Pyramid Scheme Alerts’ advisory page. They have two attorneys right there. I’m saying that you vastly misunderstand the difficulty of attacking it how you propose. Furthermore, there’s investing genius Bill Ackman who put a billion dollars of his own money on the line (yes billion with a “b”) to show that HerbaLife is a pyramid scheme. It’s a year later and though he’s got some politician support, he hasn’t made much of a dent in that one MLM company… let alone the whole MLM industry.

Capitalist said, “You have basically proven that Mona Vie is just another company amongst many.”

Umm, when I made the statement in the article, “MonaVie is a grossly overpriced product, with little nutritional value, wrapped in a poor business opportunity that appears to be illegal pyramid scheme, supported by nonsensical ‘scientific’ studies and illegal medical claims” I think I definition differentiated them from Lexus or a cell phone company. I’m not fan of Lexus’ advertising and have written about it before I even wrote about MonaVie. However, they tend to deliver in what they advertise (a car that competes well in the luxury car space as opposed to “expensive flavored water” propped up by a business opportunity that doesn’t exist). It’s ridiculous to even compare the two.

Capitalist said, “Why pick them out? I’m not sure, but it’s a free country. When I ask myself, why would a guy spend so much time focusing on a few companies? The answer is that they are easy targets for you to make some money off of.

Why don’t you re-read the first paragraph again? Here’s the information you are looking for: “The original article about my introduction to MonaVie is preserved here.” If you do a tiny bit of research you’ll see that you are completely wrong with your assessment here. I didn’t go seek out MonaVie to write about, MonaVie found me by trying to charge $45 for their bottle of juice. If they charged $3-4 like any other juice, we wouldn’t be having this conversation and I would never have written about a single MLM. As for the time I spend focusing on a few companies? I simply engage in the discussion as I do with all my articles. It’s no secret at over 6000 comments there’s a lot of discussion going on here. During that time a lot of information about how the company and its distributors are defrauding people have come to the forefront. If my readers were focused on that Lexus article and kept bringing new ways that the company scams people, maybe there’d be 6000 comments on that article. There aren’t.

And if you think it’s easy to write these articles and make money from them, you should give it a try. I wish you the best of luck. Let me know how it goes for you.

Capitalist said, “I’m probably wrong. I’m sure you will tell me why I’m wrong. I’m sure it’s all about those poor people with freedom to choose and protecting them from making bad choices and then annoying their friends.”

That’s about 1% of it. The people don’t have the information to make an informed decision. What they get is people like Pat, who a few comments above tried to say that Harvard teaches MLM… a confirmed falsehood that has been repeated for nearly 30 years now. What’s wrong with giving people the information they need to make informed decision? Some form of consumer protection exists in just about every civilized country. If you don’t agree with it, perhaps you can go to a country that outlaws it. Otherwise, perhaps you should embrace it.

You are right that you’ve already lost. You are welcome to defining “real change” however you wish, but it does not have to be mine. I’m quite happy with what I’ve accomplished and the emails that I get from thankful people affirm that. I’m sorry that you live in a black and white world where you either have created World Peace or you have wasted your life. Maybe that makes it easier for you whose ambition seems to boil down to printing labels or some such. Maybe that’s why you feel the need to attack a consumer advocate who made a real impact on the lives of at least tens of thousands people through the 3.5 million who’ve come here to read my articles.

Maybe you are just jealous you can’t make that difference and/or worried that your poor SLC economy might bust if not for these scams.

Capitalist should change his name to something more apropos like “Apologist” or “Protectionist”. His logic is inconsistent with capitalism, which basically dictates that the fittest survive. If a company like Monavie is so vulnerable to criticism that they can be killed by it, then the company deserves to die. If that company supported bottlers and packagers, that’s just too damn bad. The law of the jungle is harsh.

What capitalist is arguing for instead is protectionism or stronger unions or something along those lines, where the jobs of bottlers and packagers are protected even though the company that pays them is unfit to compete in the marketplace.

Capitalists is an idiot who doesn’t know what capitalism is. Not surprising coming from a Monavie shill.

Vogel:
You sound like a fine young gentleman with lots of friends. You totally nailed me. Congratulations on your fine win. Since you are such a winner with lots of friends…

I have a great business opportunity for you to make lots of money and be healthy! All you will have to do is give me $50,0000 to be in on the ground floor. Are you in? I cannot prove that it will ever work, but I do know that you will likely lose all your friends pursuing this dream. Send me an email with your credit card number, SSN, and address to [email protected].

Funny thing… you say the “inventor” called it flavored water…. then you post the label with the ingredients and water is not even an ingredient? All i see are a lot of wild fruits… i say wild because many of them are not farmed? you are helping me understand why it seems to work so well for so many people… thanks

The lack of water in the label has been covered in these comments in the past. I can’t remember whether companies can legally leave it off the label or if it’s another thing that MonaVie isn’t legally doing. I’ll leave that as research for you. The point is that there is indeed water whether the label says it or not. Why didn’t you put “inventor” in quotes? No one is debating this to my knowledge. Are you going to argue with the court documents or the newspaper that I cited in the article about it?

You know that the fruits are indeed farmed, right? You don’t think they just send people off to the woods or the Amazon to collect the 19 fruits?

If you really want to understand why it seems to work so well for so many people, you need to understand the same is true for MLM health products that contain none of these fruits like ASEA and Protandim. Here’s a great article published on a website from a group of doctors, scientists, and researchers: http://www.aitse.org/no-your-mlm-doesnt-work/

Capitalist said: “Vogel: You sound like a fine young gentleman with lots of friends. You totally nailed me. Congratulations on your fine win. Since you are such a winner with lots of friends.”

You’re making it pretty damn clear that you’re not here to engage in any form of honest debate but rather to play schoolyard games like “I am rubber, you are glue…”.

I merely pointed out that your argument regarding the jobs of the bottlers and packagers that Monavie uses was anti-capitalistic and that, because you don’t seem to understand the principles of capitalism and how they would apply in this scenario, your chose of user name seems unintentionally ironic. To that, you reply back with this silly example of sarcastic love bombing. I know it’s sometimes hard for people to admit when they are wrong, but that doesn’t excuse your dickish reply.

If you were a true capitalist, and supported free markets etc., you wouldn’t be howling at the moon the way you are. What better way to antagnonize an opposing viewpoint than to enter its realm and divide its sheep by posing as freindly fire. Or, you are one of those libra types that takes great pride in badgering the establishment just to amuse and bemuse.

if you insist on thinking you are a free market minded capitalist, your interpretation is tainted. If under the age of 40 and from pretty much any colledge you probably suffer a serious taint problem. A 60’s child, probably dealing with some residual drugs. You are clear and articulate though…. eh.. good drugs than. If you are between 40 and 50 there is a 132% chance you missed the 60’s slime and received an education free from liberal bias (62% slime + 70% Liberal Bias = 132%) so we can be automatic freinds for life. I suspect you know full well that what you do and say is subterfuge regardless of your age or education. If you are inclined to think otherwise I guess we keep having these chats as long as you are up for it. I don’t make it easy, but at least its fun.

for me… I am a distributer. don’t buy the stuff but get it free from time to time as a bribe offering to keep me off this site mostly. I accept it, use it for mixer. Makes great drinks. The MX Sizzler is good, or the EMV El Presidente. My super favorite is the Active Absinthe Monkey Gland.. carefull it has a Kick and a bite.. as in Joyfull and Triumphant (some holiday cheer there for you). now I don’t like the Mmum Orgasm.. not my style, your mileage may vary.

So do I win a prize too? I am creative and funny and garsh darn it people know me. Or do I get discarded as a school yard dolt …?

Vogel,
As a rule of thumb, nobody who resorts to name calling is serious about engaging in a debate. You have called me an idiotic shill and a dick. The debate you seek will not happen here. You clearly have me figured out already. You are the winner because you are a winner in general.

Capitalist: “As a rule of thumb, nobody who resorts to name calling is serious about engaging in a debate. You have called me an idiotic shill and a dick. The debate you seek will not happen here. You clearly have me figured out already. You are the winner because you are a winner in general.”

Use your eyes, not your thumb. I have already established the seriousness of my interest in debating this subject through my many past contributions to date.

You haven’t said a single thing thing that’s remotely relevant to the topic at hand. You’re just making shallow proclamations about capitalism (demonstrating that you don’t really understand what it entails) and trying to impugn the blog host’s motives. Basically, being — a dick.

If you don’t get on topic soon, you deserve to be unplugged from the dialog, so now would be a good time to stop using this forum as a pissing post.

My grandfather has always had bad cholesterol and blood pressure since he had a doctors app last week after taking Monavie for around 5 months. He stopped taking his cholesterol and blood pressure meds half way through. It is beneficial you just are pissed off that you can’t find ways to get people signed up under you when you were doing it.

Both my husband & I took this product for awhile. We both had positive health benefits from it, just entirely different ones. He got great sleep again, had more energy and it cleared his chronic sinus issues. I am lactose intolerant and seem to suffer from an over stimulated bowel. This product helped my digestive issues and made me the most regular I had been in years. We were both very pleased with our results. Also, it was interesting that it effected us both so differently.

I love it how you try to make my original comment about yourself my grandfather who had a crap ton of health issues is healthier because of it even his doctor says so I’m sorry I could care less about price or their marketing. This juice will probably make it so my children in the near future will be able to meet their great grandfather.

Ya just read it and you obviously changed your mind since then my grandfather is benefiting from it so it is good enough for me everyone has their own opinion. I only have my aunt under me and I am just in it for the energy drinks they are cheaper and healthier than buying a monster a day.

Remember that the person who invented the product characterized it as “expensive flavored water. Any claims made are purely hypothetical, unsubstantiated and, quite frankly, bogus.” Just re-read the article for the citation.

Good for you and your grandfather having a great doctor’s visit last week. But for some reason you think we’re questioning the results of that specific visit. We are not and we don’t care. If it’s not already obvious, your claim that MonaVie was the reason is what is bogus! If you don’t believe us, simply take Lazyman’s advice – go ask the inventor of MonaVie the same question you posted here. Surely, you trust him. Too bad you’re pissed that you got busted trying to make illegal medical claims. Feel free to come back and fill us in on your conversation with the inventor. I highly doubt that you will.

Whatever it is, Monavie is a good product. I have witnessed it and I have tried it. It does not matter what kind of negative research you have don e on Monavie, one way or the other, Monavie has a lot of health benefits and I have seen people overcome some of their long term illness by drinking Monavie. Trust me.

Lazy Man, from what I have read about your comments, you seems to be very vengeful and full of hatred for Monavie. Someone might have deceit you or “destroy” you that you are now bent on revenge. There are so many MLM health drink based companies around, why target Monavie? Such a shame.

I am a champion of the consumer, not scammers trying to illegal sell “expensive flavored water” as a medical treatment. Pretty hard to find any redeeming value when I’ve shown: “MonaVie is a grossly overpriced product, with little nutritional value, wrapped in a poor business opportunity that appears to be illegal pyramid scheme, supported by nonsensical ‘scientific’ studies and illegal medical claims.”

I didn’t target MonaVie. If you read the beginning of the article they pitched the product to my wife who told me about it. I have no motivation for revenge, never paid them a single dollar.

I’m glad for those whom feel the see positive results in health issues when utilizing Monavie. But, it might be a good idea to do a little research of your own to see if there is an equal or better solution for far less money. A large store chain has a supply for the same type of product.
Here is where UseLogic comes into play. The first couple questions I give anyone when looking at these types of set ups and scenarios.
– If the product is that good? Why isn’t it on store shelves?
– Why does it cost 10 – 20 times more than similar product? – If there is a legitimate answer, please refer back to the first 2 questions.
– The answer probably lies in the fact of it has to be 20 times more than product on the shelf. Because, that is the only way these other people get paid while the person that sold product way down at the bottom.

With that said. Are you getting what you paid for? Or, are you over paying for a product or service that is comparable by other mfrs?

Once again, UseLogic. In relation to the product being discussed here, how could you grow that much Acai that fast with out it being farmed? One way would be to have minor amount as the ingredient, while diverting from that fact by listing all the other ingredients.
Lot of which is not foreign to us in the US. Which leads me back to a question. Are you getting what you are paying for? Or are you paying a whole bunch of people at different levels and that is why it’s 20 times more than comparable product?

In a nutshell, the appeal argued that State was at fault for not expediently bringing Niles to trial because they had failed to enter Niles name in a “national crime information computer database”. Had they done so, Niles’ appeal argued, he would have been apprehended (and brought to trial) because, even though he had been living in an RV and traveling across the US after the charges had been filed, he had a Florida drivers license and mailing address, and he had crossed the US border numerous times (e.g., from Mexico), where he could have been intercepted by DHS.

Michael Rainey was the attorney who represented Niles in both trials/appeals. The docket for the latest appeal states that Niles made a phone call from prison, in reference to a separate civil lawsuit, (which we haven’t heard a word about until now) in which he said: “They still want to depo me, but Mike [Rainey] is hiding me right now without letting them know.”

The docket also mentions that Rainey had previously represented the father of the two girls that Niles molested.

One remarkable detail that I stumbled on while reading the latest appeal docket was that it mentioned the following in reference to the criminal act:

“While on an extended tour of the United States in his camper van, Niles visited the victims’ family in January 2000. Niles and the victims’ father became acquainted in connection with their military service and the father’s subsequent legal services on Niles’ behalf in a case unrelated to the instant case. During Niles’ visit, K.M. and M.M. told their parents that Niles had inappropriately touched them with a vibrator while they were playing in Niles’ camper van.”

This is remarkably similar to the modus operandi in the crime that Niles was convicted for while serving in the California National Guard. The appeals docket for that case states:

“Once in the quarters, OF accompanied appellant to his bedroom and complied with his suggestion to lie face down on his bed while he demonstrated use of the massager on her. According to OF, appellant claimed that her clothes were inhibiting the benefit of the massage, and he began removing them, despite her protests.”

I joined Monavie and left them after one month. The juice they sell goes off very quickly with green slimey bits floating about in it. I complained to Monavie about this and there reply was make sure I keep the drink the fridge, which I was doing. Three bottles of the juice went rotten with these horrible green slimey bits in it. I was ashamed when I poured out this juice to a potential customer (which Monavie like to call prospects). The top salesmen in this company use language that you will find in books on Neuro linguistic programming, this language is used to make people believe in the product. On the training courses that Monavie do they explain to you that you must never mention Monavie without giving a compliment to the potential customer first. This flattering and boosting up of the persons ego is to trick the potential customer into believing that they are dealing with an honest person. Its the use of language to build trust. Manipulation of the potential customer. Wow! Paul McKenna the hypnotist would love these guys.

Monavie is way over priced and people who have no idea how an mlm company works, gets sucked in to try the juice, which for the price lol you can go to a lot of places and purchase better juice for a lot cheaper, when they join all hyped, they then realize to even be able to keep commissions you have to be on autoship, when they hear no after no doing the boring old outdated methods they soon realize it is hard that way for the price of the juice. Who really wants to carry around party cups and bottles of Monavie lol.. If someone asked me, I would literally laugh and tell them there is a better way of marketing, it looks desperate to me and they have to stop you to try their juice. I am not saying this way does not work, everyone has their own way. But in all honesty, there are better home based businesses out there that are more affordable and easier to market, and there are home business that can make you a lot of money without even recruiting one person into the business. I wish anyone who has started with Monavie the best of luck, but it is not for me. And I agree with the above comments too.

I enjoyed reading your valuable info which I too hope will help educate the public about MLM schemes. I have a friend who was involved in Mona vie and has since dropped off that wagon and jumped unto the next, ASEA. I hope that she will see that there is no light at the end of that tunnel either.

Monavie is becoming *huge* in Poland. People are signing up for commitments of over 450zl per month in a country where that is a half of their salary (outside of Warsaw where there are rich people). Please please get a translation into Polish!

The products are supposed to be healthy yet the first one I looked is shampoo that has Sodium Benzoate and yet it claims: “Shampoo is made from organic, Ecocert and ToxicFree® ingredients.”https://www.mommysclub.com/product?ProductId=2

My sick father had used Acai juice called zadly which stronger than monavie the results were great: LDH droped
Sugar droped
Hypertension droped
Immunity increases
over all health status improved in 8 weeks
I believe in lab exams and direct contact…Acai is a powerful anti oxidant and it’s natural.
k.bakr
Public Health Specialist

As soon as I read “Illegal pyramid scheme” I knew that you had issues. Look up the definition of a pyramid scheme and you’ll find that it refers to a someone scheming someone out of money, and no good or services are exchanged. Multi-level marketing is perfectly legit and something Forbes writes about as a lucrative option for a home-based business, where money is exchanged for goods or services. I don’t know much about Monavie’s product, but if you were to research every product that greenwashes their labeling, your argument should be with Monsanto and 90 percent of the groceries stocked at your local supermarket. Or the personal products you use on your face, skin and even toothpaste. There are 11 chemicals that the FDA bans from these products and there are over 80,000 being used. It’s up to all of us to research our own products and not take a company’s word since there are so many loopholes in labeling. But to call a company illegal, when in fact they are not, is defamation and I don’t blame Monavie for going after you for that if nothing else.

Actually if you research pyramid schemes, you know that goods and services can be exchanged. For example, the FTC shut down the MLM, Fortune Hi-Tech Marketing because it was in their professional opinion a pyramid scheme. They convinced the judicial system to shut them down.

So unfortunately people like you, DES, have “the issues.” It’s a shame that people like you are spreading false information about what a pyramid scheme is.

As the FTC says, “Not all multilevel marketing plans are legitimate. If the money you make is based on your sales to the public, it may be a legitimate multilevel marketing plan. If the money you make is based on the number of people you recruit and your sales to them, it’s not. It’s a pyramid scheme. Pyramid schemes are illegal, and the vast majority of participants lose money.”

Forbes doesn’t about MLM being a lucrative option. There’s a Forbes contributor who does not share the opinion of Forbes (as they disclose) who has written that. It’s not a very informed piece as he only interviews a few people who are successful. It is like interviewing those who won the lottery to determine if buying lottery tickets are a viable investment opportunity – it is not.

There are enough people arguing about Monsanto. I like the website The Good Human who has done that. Monsanto didn’t come to my family and try to scam me out of my money with what seems to be an illegal period scheme… MonaVie did.

How do you know that MonaVie isn’t illegal? I’m happy for them to prove to me that they aren’t. I’ve had their top distributors (top 100 in the entire organization) come to me saying that it was all about recruiting and not about selling product. So again, I don’t see how MonaVie is legal, but that is my opinion based on the facts that I’ve disclosed here and at JuiceScam.com. My opinion is protected speech by the first amendment.

LazyMan,
Your name fits you perfectly…You are definitely a talker and NOT a Walker. They don’t ever erect statues for critics and “consumer protectors”. You need to get bitch-slapped. Seriously, stop blogging about this shit just to promote your own sh*t…..I bet you voted for Obama too…F’ing Liberal

The “energy” that you get from coffee comes from caffeine. You can get caffeine many places fairly cheaply. Caffeine is outside the topic of this post.

I’ve been doing a little research into why people don’t resist scams like this… and reading The Willpower Instinct, which explains it to some degree. I highly recommend the book. The book points out that some research suggests energy may be more mental than physical. It’s something to look into.

I disagree on the whole it doesn’t have anything to do with this post since Monavie makes an energy drink and that is what I was ordering. Thank you for the book recommendation though ordered it with my amazon points.

I didn’t want this conversation to get into whether caffeine is good or bad. That’s what I was saying is beyond the topic of MonaVie itself. I’ve seen a lot of research go both ways and I don’t know if I’ve established my own opinion. There are some nuts out there who lean on one side or the other and will slam me whatever side I went to. So I’m not going to pick sides on caffeine in general. The important thing to understand is that MonaVie’s energy drink comes from caffeine, so recommendations for energy besides coffee is any source of caffeine. Cheap caffeine pills (make sure you know how much you are taking) is one very cheap option that is not coffee.

I would have worked more of the energy drink and weight loss formulas into this article, but it was already long and I think made things fairly clear. MonaVie has recently created the Mynt program to target young adults and students and sell them energy drinks. They are copying the Vemma Verge scam that Today Show covered here. LifeVantage which I’ve written about for the last 3 or 4 years is coming out with theirs as well.

The companies realize that students will overpay a buck or two per drink and recruit others, which is profitable for them. It’s not profitable for the MLM distributors though. As Harpers magazine wrote here: “Mary Kay’s business model (like that of any multilevel-marketing enterprise) is designed primarily to profit from, rather than enrich, its workforce.”

Sorry, that was long. I should ask, what made you order MonaVie’s energy drink vs. any of the other ones? Are you interested only in energy drinks or any source (there’s even caffeine gum out there)?

I was just in Monavie to try and make some extra money in a way and I went toward the energy drinks because I figured they were better for you in some way than traditional energy drinks. Also did the math and it was cheaper for me to buy two cases of their energy drinks than to buy 1 monster a day like I used to. Now I just buy Arizona green tea since it is healthier at least I think it is than trying to drink energy drinks or colas. I was only saving cents when buying their cases though grant it it might have added up over time it just didn’t add up enough for me to keep on pursuing the idea of saving money by replacing energy drink with energy drink.

I’m surprised that MonaVie’s energy drinks are cheaper than Monster, even when bought by the case. It looks to me that eMV is $59 for a case of 24 from their list – or around $2.45 a can. I’ve got some tips here that are cheaper: Save Money on Energy Drinks (and Caffeine). Quick tips:
– My local dollar store has energy drinks for $1.
– Aldi (if you have one near you) has an energy drink called Summit for $1. Independent reviews say it probably is Monster, just in a generic label
– Mio Energy has can be bought for $3-4 in some places and has 18 servings of caffeine. Just add it to water.

These may not be “healthy” and MonaVie distributors would say that you are paying a premium for that. It’s just a really large premium to go from $24 to $59. If you go with the caffeine pill route, you can get costs down to just a couple of dollars without additives of any kind.

It’s not particularly convenient, but I brew my own green tea every few days.

I get arizona 1 dollar for a big can of it well 1.09. I paid around 105 for 2 cases and my grandfather would buy a case from me so I would be getting the “discount” by ordering two cases. Which really is better than monster here which was 2.8#<-couldn't remember second digit lol. I was big on the taste of monster I've seen dollar stores sell full throttle which aren't healthy but taste decent.

I’ve seen those Arizona cans when I’m on the road. It’s a lot of drink for the money. The only thing I was concerned about was the sugar. Some of them have a ton. That’s why I like brewing my own. I can sweeten a lot with a little lemon juice and it isn’t all that sugar.

Another good substitute is rock sugar or honey. I normally look out for the sales on teavana since I prefer loose leaf teas. Everything they have eventually goes on sale or sometimes you get random price drops you know it’s business they have to make money at some point and sometimes draw in new customers. did a research paper on tea and pointed out the differences of using bagged and loose leaf in college.

I missed that and other posts during the summer – now I’m on a bit of catch up, it seems to me that around that time a whole host of posts from former MV folks reveal a tipping point, the last desperate gasps from the purple peril.

Well, MonaVie came out with a copy of Vemma and ViSalus’ pitch to college kids and young adults. Their thing is called MonaVie Mynt, which I’ve written about. I think most of the new comments are going there.

This is really amazing stuff. For years he was the one defending MonaVie when people pointed out the obvious problems in the scam. Now it looks like he’s leaving the company and saying that the company can’t pay its debts and that the compensation plan is not viable, etc. I’m inferring this from the YouTube video that David Johnson submitted.

Yep, he joined Forever Green. The company makes Xpress Strips that appear to be a heating pack. Heating packs in the United States are classified by the FDA as a “Class 1 Medical Device.” Their marketing of the product seems to center around them saying that they’ve got a “Class 1 Medical Device.” A little research shows that a condom is a higher class, Class 2 Medical Device, so one could look at the product and say that it is less impressive that a piece of latex.

Funny how that self-aggrandizing press release in Street Insider says:

“Randy has become among the most successful and highly-regarded figures in the direct selling industry. Through his successes both domestically and internationally…”

Let’s see how that stacks up against reality. MonaVie appointed Randy Schroeder as President of the North America Market in March 2012 when the company was near the peak of its success. Since then it’s fallen like a rock. That’s why Schroeder is leaving for greener pastures (no pun intended).

Looks like Jeunesse will be making the big announcement today that they have purchased the rights to MonaVie. It will be interesting to see if it will be marketed as a “new” product like they recently did with the launch of Instantly Ageless in Nov 2014.
(Instantly Ageless is not a new product, they purchased the rights from OMG Instantly Ageless…it was “confirmed” that is is the exact product…just new packaging)

Larsen the con artist fleeced people out of millions of dollars with a scam that was knowingly predicated on pure BS from day one. There are few people less deserving of the pity he’s fishing so hard to get in this sycophantic video. He knew from the get-go that Monavie was worthless flavored water, but he and his crew were pawning it off on people as a cure for freakin’ cancer!!! What a F-ing creep!

To add insult to injury, he’s still trying to tug on the heartstrings by bloviating about The MORE Project — his “fraudulent charity”. This spawn of Satan has the gall to talk about “honor” and “leadership”. I’m surprised he didn’t get struck by a bolt of lightning from above. I long for the day that we hear news of Mr. Larceny receiving a long overdue prison sentence.

Excuse me while I go take a Borax shower to wash off the taint from watching that scumbag’s revolting pandering.

Monavie is a miracle juice ! My friends Dad had stage 4 liver cancer ,my friend heard about monavie ordered some for him and he has no sign of cancer. My Dad was Diagnosed with lymphoma he had taken chemo for a few years and it wasn’t helping a year ago he was given 6 months to live we started him on Monavie and is now remission the Doctor said he thinks he is cured. Praise God for this healing juice!

I do not care what you say about Monavie. I would pay $200 a bottle for the change it has brought to my life and body. I don’t sell it but I drink it and it has helped me tremendously. Who cares if they want to make money. I love the product and am thankful it is offered to help those who have health issues like me.

Pam said: “I do not care what you say about Monavie. I would pay $200 a bottle.”

Rather than quoting PT Barnum’s immortal words about suckers, I’ll just take you up on that pledge Pam. I will sell you Monavie for $200 a bottle. Hell I’ll throw in a 20% discount, and I won’t even make you signup as a distributor.

Normally I’d feel guilty about exploiting an ignoramus, but since you’ve already read Lazy Man’s article, it’s not like you haven’t been amply warned that you are wasting your money.

Why are all these distributors insisting this is miracle juice when the inventor already admitted that it isn’t anything special? What kind of sheeple believe this is worthwhile but don’t believe the man who made it when he says it isn’t?

You said “If a change in the compensation plan leads people to leave, it’s damning proof that their business was an illegal pyramid scheme based on recruitment and not based on retail sales to the public”

This has nothing to do with network marketing per se. The same sort of thing happened during the 2008-2010 car industry crisis. The automotive industry established certain commissions or bonuses to car dealers for doing things like setting up different dealerships and sub-dealers. When the car crisis hit and sales at the bottom end dropped, the car manufacturers could no longer pay some of these bonuses and dealer type commissions. The result was that dealerships closed or moved on. In similar fashion, Monavie had bonuses and commissions for leadership. Distributors were paid based upon how well they did at helping others establish businesses. In a binary MLM, when bottom end sales sharply drop, then the higher up leadership bonuses become a VERY big problem. This is what I meant by top heavy.

This goes back to you calling everything that is network marketing related illegal.

You said “What would constitute “actual proof” in your eyes?”

I stand behind the data published by Yevo. Actual proof would be lab results proving that this data is wrong instead of all of this circumstantial type debate that really is proving next to nothing.

Car dealerships are not recruitment pyramid schemes. They sell product that is in demand at a fair market price. You can’t compare the two.

MonaVie distributors should be making the bulk of their money from sales to the public, meaning that MonaVie’s promised recruitment-based commissions should be largely irrelevant. So even if MonaVie couldn’t pay them it shouldn’t matter. Someone making $10,000 should be making $8,000 from selling product and $2,000 from MonaVie bonuses. They aren’t going to give up their $8000 monthly income just because MonaVie can’t pay back their $2000.

I don’t think you understood that MonaVie only promised out 50% of what it brought it. It can’t have possibly got into a position where it would owe out more money than it made unless they overspent on the other 50% (buying too much inventory and stuff like that).

Vogel gave you the math which is better than lab results. If someone did lab results, you’d say that the lab probably messed up and it doesn’t qualify as proof. Why would you stand behind data of an organization that has clearly been shown by Vogel and others to not be trustworthy?

Susan said, “This goes back to you calling everything that is network marketing related illegal.” I’m just the messenger relaying the FTC guidelines are stated here. Once again, you are welcome to your opinion, but you give no basis for why anyone should trust it. Your repeated errors discredit your opinion. I’ve worked hard to explain why I stand by the FTC’s guidelines.

You said “Car dealerships are not recruitment pyramid schemes. They sell product that is in demand at a fair market price.”

It doesn’t matter. Both corporations were promising bonuses to businesses for helping setting up other businesses. Now you are the one throwing out red herrings.

You said : “I don’t think you understood that MonaVie only promised out 50% of what it brought it. It can’t have possibly got into a position where it would owe out more money than it made unless they overspent on the other 50% (buying too much inventory and stuff like that)”

It’s very simple. Corporate promised certain commissions based upon business structure and not sales volume. Example: You establish 5 other businesses that qualify as a “X” level business and we will pay you $5,000.

This is where they screwed up. They felt that by the time their binary matrix grew to a level that those bonuses would be paid that they would have overall sales that easily covered it. As I’ve tried to explain, the binary matrix has a failing were it can grow large and then the foundation falls out from under it.

It most certainly does matter that car dealerships are legitimate companies legally marketing legitimate products and MonaVie appeared to be, using the FTC guidelines, an illegal pyramid scheme based on pay-to-play requirement to buy $45 flavored water.

I do not know about MonaVie promising bonuses and not being able to pay them, but it was collapsing in July 2008 according to top distributors as outlined here: “From July 2008 – January 2009 my MonaVie business fell back around 40%. It stabalized [sic] from January through May. In June of this year to current my business has gone backwards consistently every single week an additional 30%. I watched my Blue Diamonds [sic] house get Foreclosed on, another Blue Diamonds car was repossessed. No one on my team including me was qualifying rank. At our Hotel events, I was calling up all the Blue Diamonds, Hawaiian Blue Diamonds and Black Diamonds and no one was making anywhere close to the income disclosure statement.”

It says nothing about MonaVie refusing to pay them money earned. It says that they were no longer qualifying rank. If they weren’t paying money the lawsuit cited in that article would be the distributor suing MonaVie for breech of contract. It wasn’t.

Maybe MonaVie also didn’t pay out bonuses, but that’s in addition to the scheme imploding as recruiting people to sell $45 flavored water isn’t a legitimate business.

And it’s fine to explain that the binary matrix has a failing where it can collapse… that’s a great explanation of an illegal pyramid scheme.

You said “I’m just the messenger relaying the FTC guidelines are stated here. Once again, you are welcome to your opinion, but you give no basis for why anyone should trust it. Your repeated errors discredit your opinion. I’ve worked hard to explain why I stand by the FTC’s guidelines.”

The FTC appears to have nearly a half a billion dollar yearly budget in the federally approved budget numbers. You claim they have no money to go after MLM violators.

Half a billion dollars is alot of money. If there were so many violators, I would think this budget would be sufficient to at least sent out non-compliance letters that would then show up in their database.

Fact is, there are very few in their database. Ergo, the business are in compliance with federal law.

Hebrbalife, a single MLM, has billions in profits every year. They can tie up a case in court for years with each side burning millions on lawyers.

The FTC does not have nearly a half billion budget. It’s less than a 1/3 billion or $293 million in 2015. I’ll win twice that after lump sum and taxes in PowerBall tonight ;-). Even a whole $300 million isn’t going to go very far against Herbalife.

Both those companies operated for around ten years before getting shut down. In year 9 of their existence, you would have said, “Hey the FTC didn’t shut them down, they must be legal.” That’s simply not true. The FTC’s enforcement of their guidelines is the issue. And that’s what the the former FTC economist wants to fix the broken system.

Couldn’t it have benefited call center and IT employees and other people who really weren’t in on the scam? If Marsh and Larsen and being forced to put $30K in their retirement accounts, it might be the only good thing that could have come from the company.

Rewind with me…can you hear the chants of “I am an independent business owner with an MLM business, I am NOT an employee of MV”…now fast forward to “Judge awards settlement to “MV employees” and now all those independent business owners are hoping to call themselves employees.

I don’t know as a percentage how many were sucked or forced into the ESOP – but it says 420 folks will be better off. However, 420 multiplied by the avg payout of 30k comes to $12.6m, far short of the $19.8m settlement…is that the legal fees…?

For me, all employees at MV are culpable and many will be just glad to have had an income for a few years followed by a 30k payoff and all without that nasty public publicity, eh? They must be feeling like the train drivers into Auschwitz.

Lazy Man, Candace, Strangely, Lattimore – the dream team reunion! Now that Monavie is a distant memory, relegated to the ash heap of snakeoil/pyramid scheme history, I raise my glass and salute you all. It’s safe to say that our combined efforts were instrumental in bringing about Monavie’s demise. A mitzvah!

When something of nutritional value stands in the way of Satan’s BIG PHARMA, they will do anything to shut it down or discredit it. Especially, since it works. This is exactly my point. Can’t take the chance on losing life-long human experiments, I mean customers. When you have all the money and resources at your disposal, drinking water can be discredited, oh it already has been. Whatever it takes to keep the machine well oiled and running, even if it at the expense of people’s precious lives. They don’t call it the Food and Drug Administration for nothing!!!

That serial offending reprobate Dallin Larsen has a new MLM pyramid scam in the works – Vasayo – which stands for “Vision-And-Steadiness-Assures-Your-Outcome”. Notice that the name has nothing to do with a product of any kind – it’s all about hyping another pyramid scheme.

Never had any issues with Monavie. It was actually the only thing that helpe dme lose 30 lbs. when i needed to. It isn’t an instant weight loss thing though you still have to walk and put in the exercise to make it work and you can’t just eat high fat foods and expect it to have immediate results for you. But its not a scam IMHO it has good health effects and helpe dme a lot. it is designed for people who need to lose 30-40 lbs at a time…..but it varies individual to individual I use the monavie shake mix and it helped me out a lot. i lost 30 lbs when nothing else worked

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